@article{ART003341835},
author={Kumar Raj and Cho Young Shik and Kim, Seung Min},
title={Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices},
journal={Carbon Letters},
issn={1976-4251},
year={2026},
volume={36},
number={1},
pages={1-20},
doi={10.1007/s42823-025-01004-3}
TY - JOUR
AU - Kumar Raj
AU - Cho Young Shik
AU - Kim, Seung Min
TI - Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices
JO - Carbon Letters
PY - 2026
VL - 36
IS - 1
PB - Korean Carbon Society
SP - 1
EP - 20
SN - 1976-4251
AB - Carbon nanotubes (CNTs), as one-dimensional carbon nanomaterials, exhibit exceptional electrical conductivity, mechanical strength, and chemical stability, making them highly suitable for applications in energy storage and wearable devices. Despite Floating catalyst chemical vapor deposition (FCCVD) is a scalable, one-step method capable of fabricating CNT aerogels, fibers, and sheets. A key advantage of FCCVD lies in its tunability of CNT properties such as aspect ratio, crystallinity, wall number, and chirality during synthesis, which are critical parameters for optimizing electrochemical performance. However, as-synthesized CNTs typically contain impurities such as residual catalysts, graphitic impurities and amorphous carbon, necessitating post-synthesis purification and functionalization to improve their compatibility with polymer matrices and composite systems. CNTs are widely used as active materials and conductive networks in batteries and supercapacitors, contributing to enhanced both energy and power density. Despite these advantages, CNT based devices still face challenges including variability in properties, cost, scalability, and integration issues such as structural non-uniformity, and inconsistent assemblies that limit cycle life and reproducibility. Various purification and functionalization strategies have been developed to improve the CNT quality for device integration. This review outlines FCCVD-based CNT synthesis, purification and functionalization methods, and highlights the critical roles CNTs play in advancing next-generation lithium-ion batteries and supercapacitors.
KW - FCCVD Carbon nanotube Energy storage devices Lithium-ion batteries Flexible devices
DO - 10.1007/s42823-025-01004-3
ER -
Kumar Raj, Cho Young Shik and Kim, Seung Min. (2026). Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices. Carbon Letters, 36(1), 1-20.
Kumar Raj, Cho Young Shik and Kim, Seung Min. 2026, "Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices", Carbon Letters, vol.36, no.1 pp.1-20. Available from: doi:10.1007/s42823-025-01004-3
Kumar Raj, Cho Young Shik, Kim, Seung Min "Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices" Carbon Letters 36.1 pp.1-20 (2026) : 1.
Kumar Raj, Cho Young Shik, Kim, Seung Min. Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices. 2026; 36(1), 1-20. Available from: doi:10.1007/s42823-025-01004-3
Kumar Raj, Cho Young Shik and Kim, Seung Min. "Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices" Carbon Letters 36, no.1 (2026) : 1-20.doi: 10.1007/s42823-025-01004-3
Kumar Raj; Cho Young Shik; Kim, Seung Min. Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices. Carbon Letters, 36(1), 1-20. doi: 10.1007/s42823-025-01004-3
Kumar Raj; Cho Young Shik; Kim, Seung Min. Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices. Carbon Letters. 2026; 36(1) 1-20. doi: 10.1007/s42823-025-01004-3
Kumar Raj, Cho Young Shik, Kim, Seung Min. Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices. 2026; 36(1), 1-20. Available from: doi:10.1007/s42823-025-01004-3
Kumar Raj, Cho Young Shik and Kim, Seung Min. "Carbon nanotubes for high-performance energy storage devices" Carbon Letters 36, no.1 (2026) : 1-20.doi: 10.1007/s42823-025-01004-3