Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1491122 | Materials Research Bulletin | 2010 | 5 Pages |
Mesoporous carbon spheres serving as electrode materials for supercapacitors were synthesized by a facile polymerization-induced colloid aggregation method using melamines as a carbon precursor and commercial colloidal silica as a silica source for hard template. After the carbonization of as-formed resins-template composites at 1000 °C and the removal of the silica template by hydrofluoric acid, the resulting mesoporous carbon spheres with a diameter size of ∼5 μm, specific surface area (up to 1280 m2/g) and uniform pore size as large as 30 nm could be obtained. Due to the enriched nitrogen content and the large pore size of the mesoporous carbon spheres affecting the surface wettability, resistance, and ion diffusion process in the pores, the mesoporous carbon spheres showed a high specific capacitance of 196 F/g in 5 mol/l H2SO4 electrolytes at a discharge current density of 1 A/g.