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Nitrogen-doped amorphous carbon-silicon core-shell structures for high-power supercapacitor electrodes

17

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37

References

2017

Year

Abstract

We report successful deposition of nitrogen-doped amorphous carbon films to realize high-power core-shell supercapacitor electrodes. A catalyst-free method is proposed to deposit large-area stable, highly conformal and highly conductive nitrogen-doped amorphous carbon (a-C:N) films by means of a direct-current plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition technique (DC-PECVD). This approach exploits C<sub>2</sub>H<sub>2</sub> and N<sub>2</sub> gases as the sources of carbon and nitrogen constituents and can be applied to various micro and nanostructures. Although as-deposited a-C:N films have a porous surface, their porosity can be significantly improved through a modification process consisting of Ni-assisted annealing and etching steps. The electrochemical analyses demonstrated the superior performance of the modified a-C:N as a supercapacitor active material, where specific capacitance densities as high as 42 F/g and 8.5 mF/cm<sup>2</sup> (45 F/cm<sup>3</sup>) on silicon microrod arrays were achieved. Furthermore, this supercapacitor electrode showed less than 6% degradation of capacitance over 5000 cycles of a galvanostatic charge-discharge test. It also exhibited a relatively high energy density of 2.3 × 10<sup>3</sup> Wh/m<sup>3</sup> (8.3 × 10<sup>6</sup> J/m<sup>3</sup>) and ultra-high power density of 2.6 × 10<sup>8</sup> W/m<sup>3</sup> which is among the highest reported values.

References

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