Publications by authors named "Pietro Zaccagnini"

Considering the worldwide market of batteries and supercapacitors, the (partial or total) replacement of conventional fossil-derived carbonates with bio-based ones in electrolyte formulations would allow the production of safer and more sustainable devices. In this work, embracing the 7 principle of green chemistry, glycerol derivatives (namely glycerol carbonate and solketal carbonate) are tested as solvents and additives for electrolyte formulations. Glycerol carbonate is innovatively employed as promising electrolyte solvent for electric double-layer capacitors with excellent performances.

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Renewable energy-based technologies and increasing IoT (Internet of Things) objects population necessarily require proper energy storage devices to exist. In the view of customized and portable devices, Additive Manufacturing (AM) techniques offer the possibility to fabricate 2D to 3D features for functional applications. Among the different AM techniques extensively explored to produce energy storage devices, direct ink writing is one of the most investigated, despite the poor achievable resolution.

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Enabling green fabrication processes for energy storage devices is becoming a key aspect in order to achieve a sustainable fabrication cycle. Here, the focus was on the exploitation of the tragacanth gum, an exudated gum like arabic and karaya gums, as green binder for the preparation of carbon-based materials for electrochemical capacitors. The electrochemical performance of tragacanth (TRGC)-based electrodes was thoroughly investigated and compared with another water-soluble binder largely used in this field, sodium-carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC).

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Laser-induced graphene (LIG) emerged as one of the most promising materials for flexible functional devices. However, the attempts to obtain LIG onto elastomeric substrates never succeed, hindering its full exploitation for stretchable electronics. Herein, a novel polymeric composite is reported as a starting material for the fabrication of graphene-based electrodes by direct laser writing.

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