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Our investigations into molecular hydrogen (H2) confined in microporous carbons with different pore geometries at 77 K have provided detailed information on effects of pore shape on densification of confined H2 at pressures up to 15 MPa. We selected three materials: a disordered, phenolic resin-based activated carbon, a graphitic carbon with slit-shaped pores (titanium carbide-derived carbon), and single-walled carbon nanotubes, all with comparable pore sizes of <1 nm. We show via a combination of in situ inelastic neutron scattering studies, high-pressure H2 adsorption measurements, and molecular modelling that both slit-shaped and cylindrical pores with a diameter of ∼0.7 nm lead to significant H2 densification compared to bulk hydrogen under the same conditions, with only subtle differences in hydrogen packing (and hence density) due to geometric constraints. While pore geometry may play some part in influencing the diffusion kinetics and packing arrangement of hydrogen molecules in pores, pore size remains the critical factor determining hydrogen storage capacities. This confirmation of the effects of pore geometry and pore size on the confinement of molecules is essential in understanding and guiding the development and scale-up of porous adsorbents that are tailored for maximising H2 storage capacities, in particular for sustainable energy applications.
Porous carbon materials are widely used in electrochemical applications for intermediate energy storage or water desalination. This work aimed to synthesize nanoporous carbons with well-controlled properties (e.g., specific surface area, average pore size, chemical composition) to correlate them to the performance in electrochemical applications (e.g., supercapacitors, LiS batteries). Especially the surface chemistry of highly porous carbons with different oxygen and nitrogen groups influences the electrochemical behavior. The carbon materials were obtained from polymeric precursors, including phenolic resins and polysilsesquioxanes. A physical activation with CO 2 or NH 3 that additionally introduced nitrogen groups was applied to adjust the porosity of the phenolic resin-derived carbons. Thereby, it was possible to obtain materials with different properties from the same precursor. The polysilsesquioxanes were first pyrolyzed and then thermally treated with chlorine gas to produce carbide-derived carbons. The porosity was tuned by the composition of the precursor and the synthesis temperature. The intermediate product (silicon oxycarbide) is also an attractive electrode material for Li-ion batteries. It was shown that optimization of the carbon content resulted in extended cycling stability.
This study presents electrospun niobium carbide/carbon (NbC/C) hybrid nanofibers, with an average diameter of 69 +/- 30 nm, as a facile precursor to derive either highly nanoporous niobium carbide-derived carbon (NbC-CDC) fibers for supercapacitor applications or niobium pentoxide/carbon (Nb2O5/C) hybrid fibers for battery-like energy storage. In all cases, the electrodes consist of binder-free and free-standing nanofiber mats that can be used without further conductive additives. Chlorine gas treatment conformally transforms NbC nanofiber mats into NbC-CDC fibers with a specific surface area of 1508 m2 g-1. These nanofibers show a maximum specific energy of 19.5 W h kg-1 at low power and 7.6 W h kg-1 at a high specific power of 30 kW kg-1 in an organic electrolyte. CO2 treatment transforms NbC into T-Nb2O5/C hybrid nanofiber mats that provide a maximum capacity of 156 mA h g-1. The presence of graphitic carbon in the hybrid nanofibers enabled high power handling, maintaining 50% of the initial energy storage capacity at a high rate of 10 A g-1 (64 C-rate). When benchmarked for an asymmetric full-cell, a maximum specific energy of 86 W h kg-1 was obtained. The high specific power for both systems, NbC-CDC and T-Nb2O5/C, resulted from the excellent charge propagation in the continuous nanofiber network and the high graphitization of the carbon structure.
A novel, two step synthesis is presented combining the formation of carbide-derived carbon (CDC) and redox-active vanadium pentoxide (V2O5) in a core-shell manner using solely vanadium carbide (VC) as the precursor. In a first step, the outer part of VC particles is transformed to nanoporous CDC owing to the in situ formation of chlorine gas from NiCl2 at 700 [degree]C. In a second step, the remaining VC core is calcined in synthetic air to obtain V2O5/CDC core-shell particles. Materials characterization by means of electron microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction clearly demonstrates the partial transformation from VC to CDC, as well as the successive oxidation to V2O5/CDC core-shell particles. Electrochemical performance was tested in organic 1 M LiClO4 in acetonitrile using half- and asymmetric full-cell configuration. High specific capacities of 420 mA h g-1 (normalized to V2O5) and 310 mA h g-1 (normalized to V2O5/CDC) were achieved. The unique nanotextured core-shell architecture enables high power retention with ultrafast charging and discharging, achieving more than 100 mA h g-1 at 5 A g-1 (rate of 12C). Asymmetric cell design with CDC on the positive polarization side leads to a high specific energy of up to 80 W h kg-1 with a superior retention of more than 80% over 10 000 cycles and an overall energy efficiency of up to 80% at low rates.
Manganese oxide presents very promising electrochemical properties as an electrode material in supercapacitors, but there remain important open questions to guide further development of the complex manganese oxide/carbon/electrolyte system. Our work addresses specifically the influence of carbon ordering and the difference between outer and inner porosity of carbon particles for the application in aqueous 1 M Na2SO4 and 1 M LiClO4 in acetonitrile. Birnessite-type manganese oxide was hydrothermally hybridized on two kinds of carbon onions with only outer surface area and different electrical conductivity, and conventional activated carbon with a high inner porosity. Carbon onions with a high degree of carbon ordering, high conductivity, and high outer surface area were identified as the most promising material, yielding 179 F g-1. Pore blocking in activated carbon yields unfavorable electrochemical performances. The highest specific energy of 16.4 W h kg-1 was measured for a symmetric full-cell arrangement of manganese oxide coated high temperature carbon onions in the organic electrolyte. High stability during 10 000 cycles was achieved for asymmetric full-cells, which proved as a facile way to enhance the electrochemical performance stability.
MXene as a novel intercalation-type pseudocapacitive cathode and anode for capacitive deionization
(2016)
In this proof-of-concept study, we introduce and demonstrate MXene as a novel type of intercalation electrode for desalination via capacitive deionization (CDI). Traditional CDI cells employ nanoporous carbon electrodes with significant pore volume to achieve a large desalination capacity via ion electrosorption. By contrast, MXene stores charge by ion intercalation between the sheets of its two-dimensional nanolamellar structure. By this virtue, it behaves as an ideal pseudocapacitor, that is, showing capacitive electric response while intercalating both anions and cations. We synthesized Ti3C2-MXene by the conventional process of etching ternary titanium aluminum carbide i.e., the MAX phase (Ti3AlC2) with hydrofluoric acid. The MXene material was cast directly onto the porous separator of the CDI cell without added binder, and exhibited very stable performance over 30 CDI cycles with an average salt adsorption capacity of 13 +/- 2 mg g-1.
Performance stability in capacitive deionization (CDI) is particularly challenging in systems with a high amount of dissolved oxygen due to rapid oxidation of the carbon anode and peroxide formation. For example, carbon electrodes show a fast performance decay, leading to just 15% of the initial performance after 50 CDI cycles in oxygenated saline solution (5 mM NaCl). We present a novel strategy to overcome this severe limitation by employing nanocarbon particles hybridized with sol-gel-derived titania. In our proof-of-concept study, we demonstrate very stable performance in low molar saline electrolyte (5 mM NaCl) with saturated oxygen for the carbon/metal oxide hybrid (90% of the initial salt adsorption capacity after 100 cycles). The electrochemical analysis using a rotating disk electrode (RDE) confirms the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) catalytic effect of FW200/TiO2, preventing local peroxide formation by locally modifying the oxygen reduction reaction.
We introduce a high performance hybrid electrochemical energy storage system based on an aqueous electrolyte containing tin sulfate (SnSO4) and vanadyl sulfate (VOSO4) with nanoporous activated carbon. The energy storage mechanism of this system benefits from the unique synergy of concurrent electric double-layer formation, reversible tin redox reactions, and three-step redox reactions of vanadium. The hybrid system showed excellent electrochemical properties such as a promising energy capacity (ca. 75 W h kg-1, 30 W h L-1) and a maximum power of up to 1.5 kW kg-1 (600 W L-1, 250 W m-2), exhibiting capacitor-like galvanostatic cycling stability and a low level of self-discharging rate.
Atomic layer deposition has proven to be a particularly attractive approach for decorating mesoporous carbon substrates with redox active metal oxides for electrochemical energy storage. This study, for the first time, capitalizes on the cyclic character of atomic layer deposition to obtain a highly conformal and atomically controlled decoration of carbon onions with alternating stacks of vanadia and titania. The addition of 25 mass% TiO2 leads to an expansion of the VO2 unit cell, thus greatly enhancing lithium intercalation capacity and kinetics. Electrochemical characterization revealed ultrahigh discharge capacity of up to 382 mAh[middle dot]g-1 of the composite electrode (554 mAh[middle dot]g-1 per metal oxide) with an impressive capacity retention of 82 mAh[middle dot]g-1 (120 mAh[middle dot]g-1 per metal oxide) at a high discharge rate of 20 A[middle dot]g-1 or 52 C. Rigorous stability benchmarking showed superior stability over 3,000 cycles when discharging to a reduced potential of -1.8 V vs. carbon. These capacity values are among the highest reported for any metal oxide system, while in addition, supercapacitor-like power performance and longevity are achieved. On a device level, high specific energy and power of up to 110 Wh[middle dot]kg-1 and 6 kW[middle dot]kg-1, respectively, were achieved when employing the hybrid material as anode versus activated carbon cathode.