Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 9 de 9
Filtrar
Más filtros

Banco de datos
Tipo de estudio
Tipo del documento
Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
Small ; 19(24): e2208277, 2023 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36916706

RESUMEN

The metallic sodium (Na) is characterized by high theoretical specific capacity, low electrode potential and abundant resources, and its advantages manifests itself as a promising candidate anode of sodium metal batteries (SMBs). However, the vaporization during the plating/stripping or uncontrolled growth of sodium dendrites in sodium metal anodes (SMAs) has posed major challenges to its practical applications. To address this issue, here, the SnO2 /Ti3 C2 Tx composite is rationally fabricated, in which sodiophilic SnO2 nanoparticles are in situ dispersed on the 2D Ti3 C2 Tx , providing the acceptor sites of Na+  that can control vaporization and dendrites. The SnO2 /Ti3 C2 Tx composite anode exhibits smooth and homogeneous morphology after Na-metal deposition cycles, stable Coulombic efficiency (CE) of half cells, long stable cycles of symmetric cells due to highly sodiophilic sites, and confinement effect. In addition, the full cells assembled with Na0.6 MnO2 also show excellent rate performance and cycling performance. These discoveries demonstrate the effectiveness of the acceptor sites and the confinement effect provided by the SnO2 /Ti3 C2 Tx composite, and thus provide an additional degree of freedom for designing SMBs.

2.
Small ; 18(43): e2106983, 2022 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35187834

RESUMEN

Room-temperature sodium-sulfur (RT-Na-S) batteries are attracting increased attention due to their high theoretical energy density and low-cost. However, the traditional RT-Na-S batteries assembled with glass fiber (GF) separators are still hindered by the polysulfide shuttle effect and sodium dendrite growth, limiting the battery's capacity and cycling stability. Here, a facile and effective method toward commercial polyolefin separators for constructing stable RT-Na-S batteries is presented. By coating commercial polypropylene membrane with core-shell structured MXene@C nanosheets, a powerful dual-functional separator with improved electrolyte wettability that can inhibit polysulfide migration and induce uniform sodium disposition is developed. More importantly, the modified separator can also accelerate the conversion kinetics of sodium polysulfides. Benefiting from these characteristics, the as-prepared RT-Na-S battery exhibits a remarkably enhanced capacity (1159 mAh g-1 at 0.2 C) and excellent cycling performance (95.8% of capacity retention after 650 cycles at 0.5 C). This study opens a promising avenue for the development of high-performance Na-S batteries.

3.
Langmuir ; 36(25): 6880-6887, 2020 06 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32050073

RESUMEN

Various aspects of the behavior of Janus particles near liquid/liquid interfaces have been studied through different experimental and theoretical realizations, but the effect of motility on the behavior of Janus particles near liquid/liquid interfaces has not been investigated, yet. Here, we demonstrate the ability to engineer the behavior of highly interfacial active Janus particles near a water/oil interface by introducing motility to the system. Passive, i.e., nonmotile, platinum-capped 8 µm silica (Pt-SiO2) Janus particles exhibit a strong tendency to attach to water/oil interfaces with the Pt-cap facing the oil and the SiO2 side facing the water phase. In contrast, we show that active, i.e., motile, 8 µm Pt-SiO2 Janus particles approach the interface, orient in a sideways fashion with the Janus boundary perpendicular to the interface, and then swim in the vicinity of the interface similar to observations reported near solid/liquid interfaces. Active Pt-SiO2 Janus particles near the water/oil interface show motility as a result of adding H2O2 to the particle solution. The decomposition of H2O2 into O2 and H2O creates a nonuniform gradient of O2 around the particle that hydrodynamically interacts with the water/decalin boundary. The interaction enables rotation of the particle within the swimming plane that is parallel to the interface but restricts rotation in and out of the swimming plane, thereby preventing adsorption to the liquid/liquid interface.

4.
Small ; 15(10): e1804786, 2019 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30721557

RESUMEN

Lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries are considered as one of the most potential next-generation rechargeable batteries due to their high theoretical energy density. However, some critical issues, such as low capacity, poor cycling stability, and safety concerns, must be solved before Li-S batteries can be used practically. During the past decade, tremendous efforts have been devoted to the design and synthesis of electrode materials. Benefiting from their tunable structural parameters, hollow porous carbon materials (HPCM) remarkably enhance the performances of both sulfur cathodes and lithium anodes, promoting the development of high-performance Li-S batteries. Here, together with the templated synthesis of HPCM, recent progresses of Li-S batteries based on HPCM are reviewed. Several important issues in Li-S batteries, including sulfur loading, polysulfide entrapping, and Li metal protection, are discussed, followed by a summary on recent research on HPCM-based sulfur cathodes, modified separators, and lithium anodes. After the discussion on emerging technical obstacles toward high-energy Li-S batteries, prospects for the future directions of HPCM research in the field of Li-S batteries are also proposed.

5.
Langmuir ; 27(15): 9211-8, 2011 Aug 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21675779

RESUMEN

We report nonintrusive optical microscopy measurements of single micrometer-sized silica and polystyrene colloids in inhomogeneous AC electric fields as a function of field amplitude and frequency. By using a Boltzmann inversion of the time-averaged sampling of single particles within inhomogeneous electric fields, we sensitively measure induced dipole-field interactions on the kT energy scale and fN force scale. Measurements are reported for frequencies when the particle polarizability is greater and less than the medium, as well as the crossover between these conditions when dipole-field interactions vanish. For all cases, the measured interactions are well-described by theoretical potentials by fitting a nondimensional induced dipole-field magnitude. While silica dipole-field magnitudes are well-described by existing electrokinetic models, the polystyrene results suggest an anomalously high surface conductance. Sensitive measurements of dipole-field interactions in this work provide a basis to understand dipole-dipole interactions in particle ensembles in the same measurement geometry in part II.

6.
Langmuir ; 27(15): 9219-26, 2011 Aug 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21675780

RESUMEN

We report nonintrusive optical microscopy measurements of ensembles of polystyrene colloids in inhomogeneous AC electric fields as a function of field frequency and particle size. By using an inverse Monte Carlo (MC) simulation analysis of time-averaged particle microstructures, we sensitively measure induced dipole-dipole interactions on the kT energy scale. Measurements are reported for frequencies when the particle polarizability is greater and less than the medium, as well as the crossover between these conditions when dipole-dipole interactions vanish. By using measured single dipole-field interactions and associated parameters from Part I as input in the inverse analysis, the dipole-dipole interactions in this work are accurately modeled with no adjustable parameters for conditions away from the crossover frequency (i.e., |f(CM)| > 0). As dipolar interactions vanish at the crossover, a single frequency-dependent parameter is introduced to account for microstructures that appear to result from weak AC electro-osmotic flow induced interactions. By connecting quantitative measures of equilibrium microstructures and kT-scale dipole-field and dipole-dipole interactions, our findings provide a basis to understand colloidal assembly in inhomogeneous AC electric fields.

7.
ACS Nano ; 14(7): 8658-8667, 2020 Jul 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32530617

RESUMEN

A hybrid micromotor is an active colloid powered by more than one power source, often exhibiting expanded functionality and controllability than those of a singular energy source. However, these power sources are often applied orthogonally, leading to stacked propulsion that is just a sum of two independent mechanisms. Here, we report that TiO2-Pt Janus micromotors, when subject to both UV light and AC electric fields, move up to 90% faster than simply adding up the speed powered by either source. This unexpected synergy between light and electric fields, we propose, arises from the fact that an electrokinetically powered TiO2-Pt micromotor moves near a substrate with a tilted Janus interface that, upon the application of an electric field, becomes rectified to be vertical to the substrate. Control experiments with magnetic fields and three types of micromotors unambiguously and quantitatively show that the tilting angle of a micromotor correlates positively with its instantaneous speed, reaching maximum at a vertical Janus interface. Such "tilting-induced retardation" could affect a wide variety of chemically powered micromotors, and our findings are therefore helpful in understanding the dynamics of micromachines in confinement.

8.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(31): 35532-35541, 2020 Aug 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32660235

RESUMEN

Carbon-coated silicon micro- and nanostructures have been widely used as composite anodes for lithium-ion batteries combining the benefits of high theoretical capacity of Si and better conductivity of carbon. To optimize structures that allow the Si volume expansion without losing the electrical connection, a detailed carbon protection mechanism is desired. We fabricate a network of interconnected sandwich branches with a silicon thin film encapsulated between a porous 3-dimensional graphene foam and graphene drapes (so-called a graphene ensemble). This prototype binder-free anode, of great mechanical strength and composed of only silicon and few-layer graphene, provides distinct signals under operando Raman spectroscopy. During electrochemical cycles, the graphene G peak shows variation of peak position and intensity, while the 2D peak experiences a negligible shift from limited deformation. Silicon displays excellent structural reversibility under the sandwich protection, validating the functions of graphenic carbon coating. This specific graphene ensemble can also serve as an experimental scaffold for mechanical and chemical analysis of many active materials.

9.
Langmuir ; 22(20): 8281-4, 2006 Sep 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16981737

RESUMEN

Surfaces of sulfate-terminated polystyrene microspheres are anisotropically modified with silver nanoparticles covering 20-50% of the sphere surface using electroless deposition. A PDMS templating method is employed. Silver nanoparticles are found to deposit uniformly onto the exposed sphere surfaces. The deposition is diffusion-controlled and the nanoparticles adhere strongly to the polystyrene particles despite extensive exposure to ultrasonication. Silver content is confirmed by EDAX analysis. The final silver coverage is controlled via the PDMS pre-curing conditions.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA