Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6610901 | Electrochimica Acta | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Isotropically conductive TiC/C hybrid nanofibers (TCCNFs) have been prepared by electrospinning for supercapacitor application for the first time. By changing the atmosphere of stabilization process, the TCCNFs with different TiC contents were successfully synthesized with uniform morphology and average diameter of about 100Â nm. The TCCNFs stabilized in Ar contain much more TiC than those stabilized in air. The specific capacitance of the TCCNFs stabilized in Ar and air were measured to be 77.8Â FÂ gâ1 and 130.0Â FÂ gâ1 at the current density of 0.1Â AÂ gâ1, respectively, which were much higher than the pure TiC nanoparticles and reported carbon materials with similar specific surface area. The charge storage mechanisms were discussed by analyzing the capacitive and diffusion-controlled contributions to the total capacitance. Reversible valance change of Ti atoms was observed during charge/discharge process, indicative of the occurrence of pseudoreaction. The experimental results support that the higher specific capacitance of the TCCNFs may be caused by a synergistic enhancing effect between TiC and carbon. The capacitance retention reaches 98.9% and 93.0% for the TCCNFs stabilized in Ar and air after 25 000 cycles, respectively, showing excellent stability. The present work provides a novel conductive electrode material for supercapacitors with possible pseudocapacitance, worthy of further investigation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Yaqi Ren, Jie Dai, Bo Pang, Xiang Liu, Jie Yu,