| Literature DB >> 35517294 |
Fenglian Tong1, Wei Jia1, Yanliang Pan1, Jixi Guo1, Lili Ding1, Jingjing Chen1, Dianzeng Jia1.
Abstract
A green method is designed to obtain hierarchical porous carbon nanofibers from coal. In the work, deionized water, coal, polyvinyl alcohol and Pluronic F127 are used as the aqueous solution, carbon source, spinning assistant and soft template for spinning, respectively. As electrode materials for supercapacitors, the obtained hierarchical porous carbon nanofibers exhibit a high specific capacitance of 265.2 F g-1 at 1.0 A g-1 in 6 M KOH, a good rate performance with a capacitance of 220.3 F g-1 at 20.0 A g-1 with the retention of 83.1% and a superior cycle stability without capacitance loss after 20 000 charge/discharge cycles at 10.0 A g-1. Compared with the carbon nanofibers constructed without Pluronic F127, the enhanced electrochemical performance of the sample benefits from a larger contact surface area and the mesoporous structure formed by decomposition of Pluronic F127 and good structural stability. This work not only provides a green route for high-value utilization of coal in energy storage, but also paves a new way to make hierarchical porous carbon nanofibers from coal for supercapacitor electrodes with high specific capacitance and long cycle life. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 35517294 PMCID: PMC9060944 DOI: 10.1039/c8ra08949c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1The synthetic scheme of HPCNFs.
Fig. 2SEM images of HPCNFs (a) CNFs-F0-900; (b) CNFs-F1-900; (c) CNFs-F2-900; (d) CNFs-F3-900; (e) CNFs-F4-900; TEM images of HPCNFs (f and k) CNFs-F0-900; (g and l) CNFs-F1-900; (h and m) CNFs-F2-900; (i and n) CNFs-F3-900; (j and o) CNFs-F4-900 and HRTEM images of HPCNFs (p) CNFs-F0-900; (q) CNFs-F1-900; (r) CNFs-F2-900; (s) CNFs-F3-900; (t) CNFs-F4-900.
Fig. 3(a) XRD patterns and (b) Raman spectra of HPCNFs; (c) XPS survey spectra and (d) XPS of C1s region of the CNFs-F2-900.
Fig. 4N2 adsorption–desorption isotherms (a) and pore size distributions (b) of CNFs-F0-900, CNFs-F1-900, CNFs-F2-900, CNFs-F3-900 and CNFs-F4-900 at the same temperature (900 °C).
BET specific surface areas and porous structure of CNFs-F0-900, CNFs-F1-900, CNFs-F2-900, CNFs-F3-900 and CNFs-F4-900
| Sample |
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CNFs-F0-900 | 821 | 123 | 698 | 0.44 | 0.14 | 0.30 | 2.5 |
| CNFs-F1-900 | 992 | 289 | 703 | 0.63 | 0.34 | 0.29 | 2.6 |
| CNFs-F2-900 | 1161 | 428 | 733 | 0.76 | 0.45 | 0.31 | 2.7 |
| CNFs-F3-900 | 891 | 502 | 389 | 0.72 | 0.48 | 0.24 | 3.2 |
| CNFs-F4-900 | 806 | 571 | 235 | 0.70 | 0.60 | 0.10 | 3.7 |
BET surface area.
Micropore surface area calculated using the V–t plot method.
Mesopore surface area calculated using the V–t plot method.
The total pore volume calculated by single point adsorption at P/P0 = 0.99.
The mesopore volume calculated using the V–t plot method.
The micropore volume calculated using the V–t plot method.
Average pore size.
Fig. 5(a) CV curves of the samples with different F127 mass at the scan rate of 100 mV s−1; (b) galvanostatic charge–discharge curves of the samples with different F127 mass at the same scan rate of 1.0 A g−1; (c) CV curves and (d) galvanostatic charge–discharge cures of the CNFs-F2-900 sample at different current densities.
Fig. 6(a) Specific capacitances of all samples at the current density of 0.5–50.0 A g−1; (b) electrochemical impedance spectra of HPCNFs as Nyquist plots.
Fig. 7Cycling performance of the CNFs-F2-900 electrode at 10.0 A g−1 (the inset displays galvanostatic charge–discharge cures of the CNFs-F2-900 electrode at different current density after 20 000 discharge/charge cycles at 10.0 A g−1) from coal as highly efficient electrodes materials for supercapacitors.