Carbon–Heteroatom Bond Formation by an Ultrasonic Chemical Reaction for Energy Storage Systems

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Abstract

The direct formation of CN and CO bonds from inert gases is essential for chemical/biological processes and energy storage systems. However, its application to carbon nanomaterials for improved energy storage remains technologically challenging. A simple and very fast method to form CN and CO bonds in reduced graphene oxide (RGO) and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) by an ultrasonic chemical reaction is described. Electrodes of nitrogen- or oxygen-doped RGO (N-RGO or O-RGO, respectively) are fabricated via the fixation between N2 or O2 carrier gas molecules and ultrasonically activated RGO. The materials exhibit much higher capacitance after doping (133, 284, and 74 F g−1 for O-RGO, N-RGO, and RGO, respectively). Furthermore, the doped 2D RGO and 1D CNT materials are prepared by layer-by-layer deposition using ultrasonic spray to form 3D porous electrodes. These electrodes demonstrate very high specific capacitances (62.8 mF cm−2 and 621 F g−1 at 10 mV s−1 for N-RGO/N-CNT at 1:1, v/v), high cycling stability, and structural flexibility.

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Kim, H. T., Shin, H. O., Jeon, I. Y., Yousaf, M., Baik, J., Cheong, H. W., … Kwon, T. H. (2017). Carbon–Heteroatom Bond Formation by an Ultrasonic Chemical Reaction for Energy Storage Systems. Advanced Materials, 29(47). https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.201702747

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