Poly(vinylferrocene)-Reduced Graphene Oxide as a High Power/High Capacity Cathodic Battery Material
Journal article, 2016

The preparation and performance of a new cathodic battery material consisting of a composite of poly(vinylferrocene) (PVFc) and reduced graphene oxide (rGO) is described. It shows the highest charge/discharge efficiency (at a rate of 100 A g(-1)) ever reported for ferrocene-polymer materials. The composite allows for specific capacities up to 0.21 mAh cm(-2) (770 mC cm(-2), 29 mu m film thickness) at a specific capacity density of 114 mAh g(-1) and less than 5% performance decay over 300 cycles. The composite material is binder free and the charge storing PVFc accounts for 88% of the total weight of the cathodic material. The superb performance is based on (i) perfect self-assembling of oxidized PVFc on graphene oxide (GO) leading to PVFc@GO, (ii) its stepwise (n steps) transfer onto a current collector (CC) (PVFc@GO)(n) @CC (n = drop casting steps), and (iii) the efficient electrochemical transformation of GO into rGO in the composite using viologen as homogeneous electrocatalyst. The self-assembling step is analyzed by zeta potential and atomic force microscopy (AFM) studies, demonstrating heavy ferrocene loading on GO and a mesoporous composite structure, respectively. Complete GO/rGO transition and quantitative ClO4- on breathing of the composite are found by electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance and by electrochemical AFM.

Chemistry

electrical-conductivity

Physics

atomic-force microscopy

batteries

raman-spectroscopy

functionalized graphene

Energy & Fuels

organic-solvents

li-ion

rechargeable lithium batteries

polymer nanocomposites

Materials Science

graphite oxide

aqueous-electrolyte

Author

S. M. Beladi-Mousavi

Universitat Osnabruck

S. Sadaf

Universitat Osnabruck

L. Walder

Universitat Osnabruck

M. Gallei

Technische Universitat Darmstadt

C. Ruttiger

Technische Universitat Darmstadt

Siegfried Eigler

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemistry and Biochemistry

C. E. Halbig

Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg

Advanced Energy Materials

1614-6832 (ISSN) 1614-6840 (eISSN)

Vol. 6 12

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1002/aenm.201600108

More information

Created

10/7/2017