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Stamping Fabrication of Flexible Planar Micro‐Supercapacitors Using Porous Graphene Inks

2020, Li, Fei, Qu, Jiang, Li, Yang, Wang, Jinhui, Zhu, Minshen, Liu, Lixiang, Ge, Jin, Duan, Shengkai, Li, Tianming, Bandari, Vineeth Kumar, Huang, Ming, Zhu, Feng, Schmidt, Oliver G.

High performance, flexibility, safety, and robust integration for micro‐supercapacitors (MSCs) are of immense interest for the urgent demand for miniaturized, smart energy‐storage devices. However, repetitive photolithography processes in the fabrication of on‐chip electronic components including various photoresists, masks, and toxic etchants are often not well‐suited for industrial production. Here, a cost‐effective stamping strategy is developed for scalable and rapid preparation of graphene‐based planar MSCs. Combining stamps with desired shapes and highly conductive graphene inks, flexible MSCs with controlled structures are prepared on arbitrary substrates without any metal current collectors, additives, and polymer binders. The interdigitated MSC exhibits high areal capacitance up to 21.7 mF cm−2 at a current of 0.5 mA and a high power density of 6 mW cm−2 at an energy density of 5 µWh cm−2. Moreover, the MSCs show outstanding cycling performance and remarkable flexibility over 10 000 charge–discharge cycles and 300 bending cycles. In addition, the capacitance and output voltage of the MSCs are easily adjustable through interconnection with well‐defined arrangements. The efficient, rapid manufacturing of the graphene‐based interdigital MSCs with outstanding flexibility, shape diversity, and high areal capacitance shows great potential in wearable and portable electronics.

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Perovskite Origami for Programmable Microtube Lasing

2021, Dong, Haiyun, Saggau, Christian Niclaas, Zhu, Minshen, Liang, Jie, Duan, Shengkai, Wang, Xiaoyu, Tang, Hongmei, Yin, Yin, Wang, Xiaoxia, Wang, Jiawei, Zhang, Chunhuan, Zhao, Yong Sheng, Ma, Libo, Schmidt, Oliver G.

Metal halide perovskites are promising materials for optoelectronic and photonic applications ranging from photovoltaics to laser devices. However, current perovskite devices are constrained to simple low-dimensional structures suffering from limited design freedom and holding up performance improvement and functionality upgrades. Here, a micro-origami technique is developed to program 3D perovskite microarchitectures toward a new type of microcavity laser. The design flexibility in 3D supports not only outstanding laser performance such as low threshold, tunable output, and high stability but also yields new functionalities like 3D confined mode lasing and directional emission in, for example, laser “array-in-array” systems. The results represent a significant step forward toward programmable microarchitectures that take perovskite optoelectronics and photonics into the 3D era. © 2021 The Authors. Advanced Functional Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.