Fast and Universal Approach to Encapsulating Transition Bimetal Oxide Nanoparticles in Amorphous Carbon Nanotubes under an Atmospheric Environment Based on the Marangoni Effect.
Shuoyu LiYuyi LiuPeisheng GuoChengxin WangPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2017)
Transition metal oxide nanoparticles capsuled in amorphous carbon nanotubes (ACNTs) are attractive anode materials of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). Here, we first designed a fast and universal method with a hydromechanics conception which is called Marangoni flow to fabricate transition bimetal oxides (TBOs) in the ACNT composite with a better electrochemistry performance. Marangoni flows can produce a liquid column with several centimeters of height in a tube with one side immersed in the liquid. The key point to induce a Marangoni flow is to make a gradient of the surface tension between the surface and the inside of the solution. With our research, we control the gradient of the surface tension by controlling the viscosity of a solution. To show how our method could be generally used, we synthesize two anode materials such as (a) CoFe2O4@ACNTs, and (b) NiFe2O4@ACNTs. All of these have a similar morphology which is ∼20 μm length with a diameter of 80-100 nm for the ACNTs, and the particles (inside the ACNTs) are smaller than 5 nm. In particular, there are amorphous carbons between the nanoparticles. All of the composite materials showed an outstanding electrochemistry performance which includes a high capacity and cycling stability so that after 600 cycles the capacity changed by less than 3%.
Keyphrases
- carbon nanotubes
- oxide nanoparticles
- transition metal
- solid state
- room temperature
- ion batteries
- photodynamic therapy
- ionic liquid
- body mass index
- reduced graphene oxide
- high intensity
- particulate matter
- physical activity
- liquid chromatography
- air pollution
- high resolution
- light emitting
- optical coherence tomography