JOURNAL ARTICLE

Highly deformation-tolerant carbon nanotube sponges as supercapacitor electrodes

Abstract

Developing flexible and deformable supercapacitor electrodes based on porous materials is of high interest in energy related fields. Here, we show that carbon nanotube sponges, consisting of highly porous conductive networks, can serve as compressible and deformation-tolerant supercapacitor electrodes in aqueous or organic electrolytes. In aqueous electrolytes, the sponges maintain a similar specific capacitance (>90% of the original value) under a predefined compressive strain of 50% (corresponding to a volume reduction of 50%), and retain more than 70% of the original capacitance under 80% strain while the volume normalized capacitance increases by 3-fold. The sponge electrode maintains a stable performance after 1000 large strain compression cycles. A coin-shaped cell assembled with these sponges shows excellent stability over 15,000 charging cycles with negligible degradation after 500 cycles. Our results indicate that carbon nanotube sponges have the potential to fabricate deformable supercapacitor electrodes with stable performance.

Keywords:
Supercapacitor Materials science Capacitance Carbon nanotube Electrode Electrolyte Composite material Deformation (meteorology) Nanotube Nanotechnology Porosity Carbon fibers Composite number Chemistry

Metrics

108
Cited By
4.26
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
35
Refs
0.95
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Supercapacitor Materials and Fabrication
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Advanced battery technologies research
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Conducting polymers and applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Polymers and Plastics
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.