Highly Porous Carbon Materials Derived from Silicon Oxycarbides and Effect of the Pyrolysis Temperature on Their Electrochemical Response.
Jose MeridaMaría Teresa ColomerFausto RubioM Alejandra MazoPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
The design of a material porous microstructure with interconnected micro-meso-macropores is a key issue for the successful development of carbon-derived materials for supercapacitor applications. Another important issue is the nature of these carbon materials. For those reasons, in this study, novel hierarchical micro-meso-macroporous silicon oxycarbide-derived carbon (SiOC-DC) was obtained via chlorine etching of carbon-enriched SiOC prepared via pyrolysis (1100-1400 °C) of sol-gel triethoxysilane/dimethyldiphenysiloxane hybrids. In addition, and for the first time, non-conventional Raman parameters combined with the analysis of their microstructural characteristics were considered to establish their relationships with their electrochemical response. The sample pyrolyzed at 1100 °C showed planar and less-defective carbon domains together with the largest specific surface area (SSA) and the highest volume of micro-meso-macropores, which upgraded their electrochemical response. This sample has the highest specific capacitance (C s = 101 Fg -1 (0.2 Ag -1 )), energy (E d = 12-7 Wh -1 kg -1 ), and power densities (P d = 0.32-35 kw kg -1 ), showing a good capacitance retention ratio up to 98% after 10,000 charge-discharge cycles at 0.5 Ag -1 . At a pyrolysis temperature ≥ 1200 °C, the carbon domains were highly ordered and tortuous with a high degree of interconnection. However, SSA and pore volumes (micro-meso-macropores) were significantly reduced and downgraded the C s , E d , and P d values.