Abstract:
In supercapacitor electrode fabrication, the active material loading technique directly influences
the electrochemical performance of the device. In this study, the effect of three fabrication
methods, Doctor Blade (DB), Drop Casting (DC), and Dip Coating (DP) electrode coating techniques,
applied on the nickel foam substrates is examined. Coconut shell-derived Activated Carbon
(AC) was loaded into a nickel foam (COL-INT-TECH, France) with a pore size of 0.25 mm
and a thickness of 1 mm. AC powder (0.5 g) was combined with polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP, 5
% w/w) as a binder and mixed with isopropanol as the solvent. In the DB method, a slurry was
repeatedly spread over the substrate using a glass rod. In the DC method, slurry droplets were
slowly deposited onto preheated foam at 150◦C for 5 minutes, and in the DP method, substrates
were repeatedly immersed in the slurry. After loading the AC, all electrodes were annealed
at 200◦C for 20 minutes. The cells were assembled symmetrically with a medium-retention
filter paper as a separator and 1.0 M KOH(aq) as the electrolyte. Electrochemical performance
was evaluated using cyclic voltammetry and galvanostatic charge discharge analysis in a two
electrode system. Based on a direct comparison of the three methods, it is clear that the DC
cell achieved the highest specific capacitance and areal capacitance of 17.06 F g-1, 1.68 F cm-2,
followed by the DB cell with a 14.37 F g-1,1.52 F cm-2, respectively. The DP cell showed the
lowest values, with 11.69 F g-1 and 1.06 F cm-2. The improved performance of the DC method
can be attributed to better pore accessibility and stronger adhesion between the coated AC and
nickel foam, which increases electron transport and ion diffusion. In contrast, DB and DP produced
lower capacitance values due to non-uniform coatings and partial pore blockage from
mechanical spreading or immersion. The results indicate that the electrode coating technique
plays an important role in fabricating electrodes for supercapacitors. DC method, despite its
simplicity, enables an effective active material coating technique and makes it a promising approach
for laboratory scale fabrication of biomass-derived carbon electrodes in supercapacitors.