4.8 Article

Lithographically Patterned Gold/Manganese Dioxide Core/Shell Nanowires for High Capacity, High Rate, and High Cyclability Hybrid Electrical Energy Storage

Journal

CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
Volume 24, Issue 12, Pages 2382-2390

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/cm3011474

Keywords

electrodeposition; microfabrication; acetonitrile; cyclic voltammetry; birnessite

Funding

  1. Nanostructures for Electrical Energy Storage, an Energy Frontier Research Center
  2. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DESC0001160]
  3. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  4. Division Of Chemistry [0960179] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We describe the fabrication of arrays of nanowires on glass in which a gold core nanowire is encapsulated within a hemicylindrical shell of manganese dioxide. Arrays of linear gold (Au) nanowires are first prepared on glass using the lithographically patterned nanowire electrodeposition (LPNE) method. These Au nanowires have a rectangular cross-section with a width and height of approximate to 200 and 40 nm, respectively, and lengths in the 1 mm to 1 cm range. Au nanowires are then used to deposit MnO2 by potentiostatic electrooxidation from Mn2+ solution, forming a conformal, hemicylindrical shell with a controllable diameter ranging from 50 to 300 nm surrounding each Au nanowire. This MnO2 shell is delta-phase and mesoporous, as revealed by X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis reveals that the MnO2 shell is mesoporous (mp-MnO2), consisting of a network of approximate to 2 nm fibrils. The specific capacitance, C-sp, of arrays of gold:mp-MnO2 nanowires is measured using cyclic voltammetry. For a mp-MnO2 shell thickness of 68 +/- 3 nm, core:shell nanowires produce a C-sp of 1020 +/- 100 F/g at 5 mV/s and 450 +/- 70 F/g at 100 mV/s. The cycle stability of this C-sp, however, is extremely limited in aqueous electrolyte, decaying by >90% in 100 scans, but after oven drying and immersion in dry 1.0 M LiClO4, acetonitrile, dramatically improved cycle stability is achieved characterized by the absence of C-sp, fade for 1000 cycles at 100 mV/s. Core:shell nanowires exhibit true hybrid energy storage, as revealed by deconvolution of C-sp into insertion and noninsertion components.

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