Spiral self-assembly of lamellar micelles into multi-shelled hollow nanospheres with unique chiral architecture

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Abstract

Functional carbon nanospheres are exceptionally useful, yet controllable synthesis of them with well-defined porosity and complex multi-shelled nanostructure remains challenging. Here, we report a lamellar micelle spiral self-assembly strategy to synthesize multi-shelled mesoporous carbon nanospheres with unique chirality. This synthesis features the introduction of shearing flow to drive the spiral self-assembly, which is different from conventional chiral templating methods. Furthermore, a continuous adjustment in the amphipathicity of surfactants can cause the packing parameter changes, namely, micellar structure transformations, resulting in diverse pore structures from single-porous, to radial orientated, to flower-like, and to multi-shelled configurations. The self-supported spiral architecture of these multi-shelled carbon nanospheres, in combination with their high surface area (~530 m2 g−1), abundant nitrogen content (~6.2 weight %), and plentiful mesopores (~2.5 nm), affords them excellent electrochemical performance for potassium-ion storage. This simple but powerful micelle-directed self-assembly strategy offers inspiration for future nanostructure design of functional materials.

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Peng, L., Peng, H., Liu, Y., Wang, X., Hung, C. T., Zhao, Z., … Zhao, D. (2021). Spiral self-assembly of lamellar micelles into multi-shelled hollow nanospheres with unique chiral architecture. Science Advances, 7(45). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abi7403

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