1. Vanadium nitride-vanadium oxide-carbon nanofiber hybrids for high performance supercapacitors.
- Author
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Wunch, Melissa A., Garcia, Juan Alex, Mahmood, Samsuddin Faisal, Tian, Yafen, Balkus, Kenneth J., Ferraris, John P., and Yang, Duck Joo
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VANADIUM , *SUPERCAPACITORS , *ENERGY storage , *SUPERCAPACITOR electrodes , *VANADIUM oxide , *ENERGY density , *CARBON nanofibers , *NITRIDATION - Abstract
Vanadium Nitride (VN) is attractive for energy storage due to its high conductivity (1.6 × 106 S/m) and specific capacitance (1350 F/g) but limited to alkaline electrolytes for redox. In contrast, V 2 O 3 is redox active but not very conductive. In these hybrids a mixture of VN and vanadium oxide (V 2 O 3) were encapsulated in electrospun carbon-nanofibers. A combination of VN and V 2 O 3 takes advantage of the high conductivity from VN and the redox activity from V 2 O 3. Additionally, having the vanadium encapsulated within the carbon can help with the stability as the electrolyte will not have direct interaction with the surface. These hybrids were made by in-situ nitridation of the encapsulated V 2 O 5 followed by ex-situ activation with carbon dioxide. The hybrids were characterized by XPS and Raman spectroscopy. Hybrids of VN/V 2 O 3 -CNF showed increased capacitance of 245 Fg−1 with energy and power densities of 70.2 Wh kg−1 and 1751 W kg−1 in ionic liquid electrolyte. The devices showed good cycle stability with ∼90 % retention after 10,000 cycles at a current density of 1 Ag−1. These findings highlight the potential of VN/V 2 O 3 -CNF hybrids as high-performance supercapacitor electrodes. The combination of high conductivity and redox activity, along with encapsulation within CNFs, opens promising avenues for advanced energy storage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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