Iron-Catalyzed Laser-Induced Graphitization Enabling Current Collector-Free Electrodes With Spatially Tunable Iron/Iron Oxide Phases
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2025-10-16
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Journal Article
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yes
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Abstract
Iron-catalyzed laser-induced graphitization (IC-LIG) represents an eco-efficient alternative to traditional carbon electrode manufacturing. Combining a bio-based tannic acid-iron precursor ink with CO₂ laser treatment results in sheet resistance of 23.59 ± 1.2 Ω square⁻¹ on renewable substrates. Varying the tannic-acid-to-iron ratio (TA:Fe), the rheology of the precursor ink can be tuned, enabling versatile application techniques, including spray coating, screen printing, and direct-ink-writing (DIW). Subsequent laser-treatment enables the formation of functional IC-LIG electrodes for all application methods, while even thick DIW-printed layers (260 μm) result in complex, conductive electrode patterns. Laser post-treatment expands design possibilities by locally tuning iron phases, such as converting γ-iron to magnetite. The unidirectional laser-treatment results in a layered arrangement, forming a multilayer electrode with a highly graphitized top layer serving as a current collector substitute, and an underlying composite of iron-rich nanoparticles embedded in a porous graphitic foam, acting as a hybrid electrode. Electrochemical analysis reveals double-layer capacitor behavior at low TA:Fe ratios, while higher ratios demonstrate increased redox activity and pseudo-capacitive characteristics. Achieving stable capacities of 15 mF cm⁻² with a 1 M NaCl electrolyte over 5000 cycles underscores the potential of IC-LIG electrodes as a sustainable solution for advanced energy storage devices and beyond.
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published
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Volume
37 (41)
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Wiley-VCH
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Subject
core-shell nanoparticles; hybrid carbon-iron electrodes; multilayer electrode designs; supercapacitors; sustainable energy storage materials
Organisational unit
03917 - Burgert, Ingo / Burgert, Ingo
