Flexible Nano‐felts of Carbide‐Derived Carbon with Ultra‐high Power Handling Capability
Article 2011 en
Authors
VP
Volker Presser
LZ
Lifeng Zhang
JN
Jun Niu
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract Nano‐fibrous felts (nano‐felts) of carbide‐derived carbon (CDC) have been developed from the precursor of electrospun titanium carbide (TiC) nano‐felts. Conformal transformation of TiC into CDC conserves main features of the precursor including the high interconnectivity and structural integrity; the developed TiC‐CDC nano‐felts are mechanically flexible/resilient, and can be used as electrode material for supercapacitor application without the addition of any binder. After synthesis through chlorination of the precursor at 600 °C, the TiC‐CDC nano‐fibers show an average pore size of ∼1nm, a high specific surface area of 1390 m 2 /g; and the nano‐fibers have graphitic carbon ribbons embedded in a highly disordered carbon matrix. Graphitic carbon is preserved from the precursor nano‐fibers where a few graphene layers surround TiC nanocrystallites. Electrochemical measurements show a high gravimetric capacitance of 110 F/g in aqueous electrolyte (1 M H 2 SO 4 ) and 65 F/g in organic electrolyte (1.5 M TEA‐BF 4 in acetonitrile). Because of the unique microstructure of TiC‐CDC nano‐felts, a fade of the capacitance of merely 50% at a high scan rate of 5 V/s is observed. A fade of just 15% is observed for nano‐felt film electrodes tested in 1 M H 2 SO 4 at 1 V/s, resulting in a high gravimetric capacitance of 94 F/g. Such a high rate performance is only known for graphene or carbon‐onion based supercapacitors, whereas binders have to be used for the fabrication of those supercapacitors.
Min Heon, S. E. Lofland, James R. Applegate, Robert T. Nolte, Emma Cortes, J. D. Hettinger, Pierre‐Louis Taberna, Patrice Simon, Peihua Huang, Brunet Magali, Yury Gogotsi
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