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Dispersant-free conducting pastes for flexible and printed nanocarbon electrodes

Author

Listed:
  • Joong Tark Han

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute
    University of Science and Technology)

  • Bo Hwa Jeong

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

  • Seon Hee Seo

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

  • Kwang Chul Roh

    (Energy Materials Center, Korea Institute of Ceramic Engineering and Technology)

  • Sumi Kim

    (Energy Materials Center, Korea Institute of Ceramic Engineering and Technology)

  • Sua Choi

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

  • Jong Seok Woo

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

  • Ho Young Kim

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

  • Jeong In Jang

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

  • Du-Chul Shin

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

  • Sooyeon Jeong

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

  • Hee Jin Jeong

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

  • Seung Yol Jeong

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

  • Geon-Woong Lee

    (Nano Carbon Materials Research Group, Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute)

Abstract

The dispersant-free fabrication of highly conducting pastes based on organic solvents with nanocarbon materials such as carbon nanotubes and graphene nanoplatelets has been hindered by severe agglomeration. Here we report a straightforward method for fabricating nanocarbon suspensions with >10% weight concentrations in absence of organic dispersants. The method involves introducing supramolecular quadruple hydrogen-bonding motifs into the nanocarbon materials without sacrificing the electrical conductivity. Printed films of these materials show high electrical conductivity of ~500,000 S m−1 by hybridization with 5 vol% silver nanowires. In addition, the printed nanocarbon electrodes provide high-performance alternatives to the platinum catalytic electrodes commonly used in dye-sensitized solar cells and electrochemical electrodes in supercapacitors. The judicious use of supramolecular interactions allows fabrication of printable, spinnable and chemically compatible conducting pastes with high-quality nanocarbon materials, useful in flexible electronics and textile electronics.

Suggested Citation

  • Joong Tark Han & Bo Hwa Jeong & Seon Hee Seo & Kwang Chul Roh & Sumi Kim & Sua Choi & Jong Seok Woo & Ho Young Kim & Jeong In Jang & Du-Chul Shin & Sooyeon Jeong & Hee Jin Jeong & Seung Yol Jeong & Ge, 2013. "Dispersant-free conducting pastes for flexible and printed nanocarbon electrodes," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 4(1), pages 1-8, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:4:y:2013:i:1:d:10.1038_ncomms3491
    DOI: 10.1038/ncomms3491
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