Generation of B-doped graphene nanoplatelets using a solution process and their supercapacitor applications.
ACS Nano. 2013 Jan 22; 7(1):19-26.AN

Abstract

Chemically modified graphene (CMG) nanoplatelets have shown great promise in various applications due to their electrical properties and high surface area. Chemical doping is one of the most effective methods to tune the electronic properties of graphene materials. In this work, novel B-doped nanoplatelets (borane-reduced graphene oxide, B-rG-O) were produced on a large scale via the reduction of graphene oxide by a borane-tetrahydrofuran adduct under reflux, and their use for supercapacitor electrodes was studied. This is the first report on the production of B-doped graphene nanoplatelets from a solution process and on the use of B-doped graphene materials in supercapacitors. The B-rG-O had a high specific surface area of 466 m(2)/g and showed excellent supercapacitor performance including a high specific capacitance of 200 F/g in aqueous electrolyte as well as superior surface area-normalized capacitance to typical carbon-based supercapacitor materials and good stability after 4500 cycles. Two- and three-electrode cell measurements showed that energy storage in the B-rG-O supercapacitors was contributed by ion adsorption on the surface of the nanoplatelets in addition to electrochemical redox reactions.

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Authors+Show Affiliations

Han J
Department of Chemistry, Inha University, 100 Inha-ro, Nam-gu, Incheon, 402-751 Korea.
Zhang LL
No affiliation info available
Lee S
No affiliation info available
Oh J
No affiliation info available
Lee KS
No affiliation info available
Potts JR
No affiliation info available
Ji J
No affiliation info available
Zhao X
No affiliation info available
Ruoff RS
No affiliation info available
Park S
No affiliation info available

MeSH

Electric CapacitanceElectric Power SuppliesElectrodesElectronicsEquipment DesignEquipment Failure AnalysisGraphiteNanostructuresParticle Size

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

23244292