4.5 Article

Characterisation of steam-treated nanoporous carbide-derived carbon of TiC origin: structure and enhanced electrochemical performance

Journal

JOURNAL OF POROUS MATERIALS
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 1057-1070

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10934-017-0517-8

Keywords

CDC; Microporous carbon; Post-activation; Adsorption; Double-layer capacitance

Funding

  1. Estonian Ministry of Education and Research [IUT34-14]
  2. EU through the FP7 project HESCAP

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Modifications of pore size distribution and structural order of nanoporous carbide-derived carbon (CDC) materials with variety of surface areas and pore sizes were investigated using physical activation by etching with water vapour. Variable etching duration was used to explore the activation impact on the pore size distribution and the adsorption behaviour of TiC-derived carbon. A distribution of micro- and mesopores, modified during physical activation, was studied using N-2 and CO2 adsorption. Notable impact of preceding carbon structure on the activation product was revealed by the results of scanning electron microscopy, powder X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. An infrared spectroscopy, energy dispersive spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy confirmed that water-induced etching of CDC followed by high-temperature treatment in inert gas atmosphere does not change notably the total amount of surface oxygen, however, leads to the changes in a composition of oxygen containing functional groups in post-activated carbon. The electrochemical evaluation was performed in triethylmethylammonium tetrafluoroborate/acetonitrile electrolyte to elaborate the structure-electrochemical properties relationships on post-activated nanoporous CDC materials. It was observed that the degree of improvement in double-layer capacitance achievable with a steam-treatment significantly depends on the preceding properties of CDC prior treatment, whereby the highest capacitance, similar to 160 Fg(-1), was reached for the steam-treated TiC-derived CDC made at 800 A degrees C, which clearly is a very promising material for the electrical double-layer capacitor.

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