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  • Making Stretchable Hybrid S...
    Shao, Guangwei; Yu, Rui; Zhang, Xin; Chen, Xing; He, Faliang; Zhao, Xin; Chen, Nanliang; Ye, Meidan; Liu, Xiang Yang

    Advanced functional materials, 08/2020, Volume: 30, Issue: 35
    Journal Article

    To obtain supercapacitors for wearable electronic devices, highly conductive stretchable electrode substrates with excellent tensile recovery are required. However, the simultaneous realization of the above mentioned characteristics is difficult. In this study, tough stainless‐steel fibers (SSFs) are employed as the substrates for knitting into stainless‐steel meshes (SSMs), for the fabrication of textile electrodes with typical 2D‐interconnected networks. The obtained knitted networks can transform the angular elasticity of SSFs into the stretchability of the textile electrodes. The electrodes based on the SSM substrates can be obtained via the in situ growth of NiCo2S4 nanosheets covered by CoS2 nanowires, which exhibit a high specific capacity, high rate capability, and excellent cycling stability. Moreover, the first stretchable solid‐state hybrid supercapacitors based on SSM display excellent performances with respect to a high energy density (60.2 Wh kg−1 at 800 W kg−1), remarkable tensile recovery (≤40% elongation), and high stability (≈76.4% capacity retention at 30% strain for 1000 stretching cycles). The highly stretchable supercapacitor is sewn on the elbow of a garment to drive a light‐emitting diode, and it maintains a high performance with respect to the repetitive process of bending and straightening, thus demonstrating the high applicability of the designed SSMs to wearable electronics. Knitted textile electrodes of typical 2D interconnected networks with special patterns from stainless‐steel fibers are applied in stretchable solid‐state hybrid supercapacitors. The supercapacitors retain 76.4% of the initial capacitance at 30% strain after 1000 stretching cycles, and display excellent electrochemical and mechanical stability, demonstrating high applicability in wearable electronics.