Liyang Xu,
Li Sun*,
Jian Feng,
Linlin Qi,
Ishaq Muhammad,
Jabeen Maher,
Xiaoyu Cheng and
Weiming Song*
College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Qiqihar University, Qiqihar, Heilongjiang 161006, P. R. China. E-mail: qdsongweiming@163.com; sunli04070215@163.com
First published on 15th September 2017
Herein, a series of novel iron nitride (Fe2N)/cubic-ordered mesoporous carbon (OMC) composites (Fe2N@OMC) were synthesized via a facile nanocasting route and ammonia calcination. Physical characterization results indicate that small non-aggregated Fe2N nanoparticles were evenly distributed on the external surface and in the pores of the carbon material with a linear array of mesopores in a regular interval arrangement. An electrochemical test was carried out using Fe2N@OMC as a negative electrode of a supercapacitor in 6 mol L−1 KOH aqueous electrolytes. The results indicated that the obtained Fe2N@OMC-2 exhibited a superior specific capacitance of 547 F g−1 at 1 mV s−1 and 520 F g−1 at 0.5 A g−1, an excellent rate capability (398 F g−1 at 20 A g−1 with capacitance retention of 76%), and an outstanding cycling stability. After 1000 cycles, the specific capacitance retention of Fe2N@OMC-2 remained 85%, which was much higher than 28% of the bare Fe2N.
Among many kinds of metal nitrides, Fe2N is recognized as the best choice as a pseudocapacitive electrode material due to its outstanding electrical conductivity, low cost, low resistance, and environmental friendliness.27,28 However, in the synthesis of transition metal nitrides, products always form a large number of bulks of transition metal nitrides; this leads to low utilization rate of their high capacitances in a strong current system. To overcome this problem and enhance the electrochemical performance, carbon material and transition metal nitride composites have been synthesized by researchers. The carbon materials such as ordered mesoporous carbons (OMC), activated carbons, carbon nanofibers, and carbon nanotubes29–32 with a high specific surface area can increase the electric conductivity of composite materials and provide a carbon skeleton to support the uniform deposition of metal nitride particles, thus increasing the utilization efficiency of transition metal nitrides.33–36
There are only a few investigations and research on the use of iron nitride as an electrode material for supercapacitors. Zhu et al. reported that Fe2N/graphene was synthesized via deposition of ZnO on a graphene nanosheet surface. Then, ZnO and Fe3+ were subjected to ion-exchange and finally annealed under an atmosphere of ammonia. The synthetic composite tested as an electrode in an electrolyte of 1 M LiCl showed a specific capacitance of 170 F g−1 at a scan rate of 10 mV s−1 and 120 F g−1 at 100 mV s−1 in a three-electrode system.37 A Fe2N/activated carbon composite was fabricated via hydrothermal and ammonia treatments by Agata Śliwaka et al. The specific capacitance of this composite used as an electrode active material for supercapacitors operating in 6 M KOH is 498 and 371 F g−1 at the scan rates of 10 and 100 mV s−1, respectively.38 In this study, we first report the synthesis of a series of novel Fe2N@ordered cubic mesoporous carbon composites (Fe2N@OMC), and the resultant best composite as an active material of the electrode for supercapacitors operating in 6 M KOH shows a superior capacitance values of 506 F g−1 at the scan rates of 10 mV s−1 and 435 F g−1 at the scan rates of 100 mV s−1.
The clean nickel foams (1 × 10 cm2) were prepared in advance. Then, 1 × 1 cm2 nickel foams were coated by mixing 80 wt% active material (OMC, Fe2N, Fe2N@OMC-1, Fe2N@OMC-2, or Fe2N@OMC-3) with 10 wt% polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) as a binding agent and 10 wt% acetylene black conductor. The mass of the active materials on each electrode was approximately 4.00 mg. Cyclic voltammetry (CV) and galvanostatic charge/discharge measurements were carried out by an electrochemical work station (CHI660E). The electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) measurement was performed using an electrochemical work station (PAR VersaSTAT 4) at an open circuit potential from 100 kHz to 0.01 Hz with an alternating current amplitude of 5 mV. The specific capacitance (C, F g−1) of the electrode materials can be calculated from the galvanostatic discharged curves and the cyclic voltammograms according to the following equations:
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was performed to further observe the microstructure and the distribution of Fe2N particles for the synthesized products. The TEM image of OMC shows a highly ordered mesoporous structure with a linear array of mesopores in a regular interval arrangement (Fig. 3a).39 The TEM image of Fe2N@-OMC-2 indicates a homogeneous distribution of small and non-agglomerative Fe2N nanoparticles (with a diameter of 10–30 nm) on the surface of OMC, as shown in Fig. 3c. By contrast, the TEM image of Fe2N@OMC-1 shows that the well-ordered structure is still retained and the presence of Fe2N particles almost cannot be observed in Fig. 3b. On the other hand, the image of Fe2N@OMC-3 revealed an uneven distribution of big Fe2N particles on the surface of OMC, and the ordered structure was severely damaged, as shown in Fig. 3d. The high-resolution TEM (HRTEM) image (Fig. 3e) exhibits well-resolved lattice fringes, again confirming the high-crystalline nature of the Fe2N nanoparticles for Fe2N@OMC-2. The lattice fringe spacings are measured to be 0.21 and 0.44 nm, which are assigned to the d-spacing of (102) and (200) planes of the orthorhombic Fe2N phase (JC-PDS #50-0958), respectively, and the result is consistent with that of the analysis of XRD.40 X-ray energy-dispersive spectrometer (EDS) elemental mapping was performed to further confirm the element distribution. The SEM image (Fig. S1a ESI†) of Fe2N@OMC-2 and its EDS elemental mapping data (Fig. S1c and d ESI†) show that the particles are mainly C (red), Fe (purple), and N (green), which are uniformly distributed in Fe2N@OMC-2.
Fig. 3 TEM images of OMC (a), Fe2N@OMC-1 (b), Fe2N@OMC-2 (c), and Fe2N@OMC-3 (d). HRTEM image of Fe2N@OMC-2 (e). |
The content of Fe2N calculated from thermogravimetric analysis (Fig. S2 and Table S1, ESI†) was 28.1, 40.3, and 57.1 wt% in Fe2N@OMC-1, Fe2N@OMC-2, and Fe2N@OMC-3, respectively. For further characterization of the porous structure of the prepared composites, the N2 adsorption–desorption isotherm (Fig. 4a) and pore size distribution curves (Fig. 4b) were obtained by nitrogen adsorption–desorption analysis. The samples OMC, Fe2N@OMC-1, and Fe2N@OMC-2 exhibit type IV curves with an H1 hysteresis loop, which indicates the mesoporous nature of the synthesized composite materials due to the presence of OMC. In comparison, the H1 hysteresis loop cannot be observed in the N2 adsorption–desorption isotherm of Fe2N and Fe2N@OMC-3 (Fig. 4a). The textural properties and parameters, such as the BET surface area (SBET), the total pore volume (VT), and the average pore diameter (DBJH), are estimated, and the data value are summarized in Table 1. The BET surface area, total pore volume, and average pore diameter of initial OMC are 1609 m2 g−1, 2.13 cm3 g−1, and 5.29 nm, respectively. The porosity development in the composite materials is gradually reduced with the increasing deposition of Fe2N on the carbon surface. Particularly, when the content of Fe2N increases to 57 wt% of Fe2N@OMC-3, the BET surface area significantly decreases from 1609 to 583 m2 g−1 from OMC to Fe2N@OMC-3 due to the blockage of the pore system by the big Fe2N particles deposited on the external carbon surface, which can be detected in the TEM image in Fig. 3d. This finding is also supported by a significant decrease in the total pore volume from 2.13 cm3 g−1 for OMC to 0.44 cm3 g−1 for Fe2N@OMC-3. For Fe2N@OMC-1, the porosity of OMC is preserved to a greater extent (SBET: 1232 m2 g−1, VT: 1.55 cm3 g−1), but the content of Fe2N is only 28 wt% of Fe2N@OMC-1. The BET surface area of Fe2N@OMC-2 is much higher than that of Fe2N@OMC-3 (919 vs. 583 m2 g−1). The total pore volume of Fe2N@OMC-2 is 0.99 cm3 g−1, which is only two-fold lower than that of OMC, 2.13 cm3 g−1. Moreover, the content of Fe2N can reach 40.3 wt% of Fe2N@OMC-2. The pore size distribution calculated from DBJH reveals that the widths of pores are 5.29, 14.2, 5.03, 4.88, and 2.62 nm in OMC, Fe2N, Fe2N@OMC-1, Fe2N@OMC-2, and Fe2N@OMC-3, respectively.
Fig. 4 The nitrogen adsorption–desorption isotherms (a) and pore diameter distribution (b) of OMC, Fe2N, Fe2N@OMC-1, Fe2N@OMC-2, and Fe2N@OMC-3. |
Sample name | SBET (m2 g−1) | VT (cm3 g−1) | DBJH (nm) |
---|---|---|---|
OMC | 1609 | 2.13 | 5.29 |
Fe2N | 62 | 0.02 | 14.2 |
Fe2N@OMC-1 | 1232 | 1.55 | 5.03 |
Fe2N@OMC-2 | 919 | 0.99 | 4.88 |
Fe2N@OMC-3 | 583 | 0.44 | 2.62 |
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) measurements were performed to analyze the surface information of the synthesized products. The surface iron concentration of Fe2N@OMC-1, Fe2N@OMC-2, and Fe2N@OMC-3 is 1.7, 6.2, and 14.6 at%, respectively (Table S1, ESI†). The N 1s XPS spectra of Fe2N@OMC-2 (Fig. 5c) and Fe2N@OMC-3 (Fig. 5e) were divided into five component peaks, which corresponded to nitrogen bonded with metal nitride (∼397.6 eV), pyridinic-N (∼398.4 eV), pyrrolic-N (∼399.8 eV), graphitic-N (∼400.8 eV), and nitrogen oxide (∼401.9 eV) functionalities.29,38 The N 1s XPS spectrum of Fe2N@OMC-1 indicates no metal nitride functionality (Fig. 5a) as compared to that of Fe2N@OMC-2 and Fe2N@OMC-3, whereas Fe2N really exists in the Fe2N@OMC-1, as demonstrated by XRD analysis. This finding indicated that iron nitride also exists in the pores of OMC and this part of iron nitride cannot be detected via XPS, which also applies to Fe2N@OMC-2 and Fe2N@OMC-3. The high-resolution XPS spectrum of the as-made samples for the Fe 2p level exhibits main peaks at around 707.5 and 721.4 eV that correspond to the Fe 2p3/2 and Fe 2p1/2 levels, respectively. They are assigned to Fe(II) in iron nitride. Moreover, the peaks appear at 710.0, 715.6, 723.8, and 729.1 eV, which are attributed to the presence of Fe–O bonds.41,42 The electrochemical performance of the obtained samples was analyzed in a standard three electrode system. The cyclic voltammogram of OMC shows a rectangular and symmetric shape, indicating a typical electric double-layer (EDL) behaviour, and all cyclic voltammograms of Fe2N-containing samples exhibit undoubtedly the reversible faradaic redox reactions attributing to Fe2N, as shown in Fig. 6a. All the composites of Fe2N@OMC-1, Fe2N@OMC-2, and Fe2N@OMC-3 have sharper and higher redox peaks as compared to bare Fe2N; this indicates that the presence of OMC can effectively enhance the electrochemical performance of these composites due to better utilization of Fe2N during charging and discharging when Fe2N is evenly distributed on the surface of OMC. The higher specific surface area of Fe2N@OMC-2, which implies a better distribution of Fe2N particles on the surface of OMC as compared to that of Fe2N@OMC-3, is a reason for the stronger pseudocapacitive behavior reflected by the voltammetry curve. However, excessive specific surface area of Fe2N@OMC-1 will sacrifice the content of Fe2N, thereby decreasing the electrochemical pseudocapacity, which is not expected. For Fe2N@OMC-1, Fe2N@OMC-2, and Fe2N@OMC-3 composites, both the charge storage mechanism of the electric double-layer behavior and faradaic redox reactions derived from OMC and Fe2N, respectively, must be investigated and studied. In Fig. 6b, a symmetrical triangular can be observed remarkably in the galvanostatic charge–discharge curves of OMC, which demonstrates that OMC has an outstanding double-layer capacitance and the platforms of the triangular shape shown by the galvanostatic charge–discharge curves of Fe2N, Fe2N@OMC-1, Fe2N@OMC-2, and Fe2N@OMC-3 correspond to the redox peaks of cyclic voltammogram at −0.75 ÷ −0.62 V and −1.05 ÷ −0.94 V. Moreover, it was obvious that the discharge time curves (Fig. S3 ESI†) of synthetic products were in the order of OMC < Fe2N < Fe2N@OMC-3 < Fe2N@OMC-1 < Fe2N@OMC-2. For Fe2N@OMC-2, excellent capacitance values of 547 F g−1 at 1 mV s−1 and 520 F g−1 at 0.5 A g−1 can be calculated by voltammetry and galvanostatic charge–discharge. Fe2N@OMC-2 has better specific capacitance as compared to those reported in other studies,37,38 as shown in Table S2.† In the application of supercapacitors, the material of the OMC-based Fe2N composite with very high specific capacitance has never been synthesized before. The capacitance of Fe2N@OMC-2 is more than two times that of bare Fe2N at 1 mV s−1 and 0.5 A g−1 and dramatically decreases in the strong current and high scan rate regions (Fig. 6c and d). The specific capacitances of Fe2N@OMC-1, Fe2N@OMC-2, and Fe2N@OMC-3 were 310, 398, and 245 F g−1 at a high current density of 20 A g−1, maintaining 75, 76, and 61% of the initial capacitance at 0.5 A g−1. For comparison, bare Fe2N exhibits a specific capacitance of only 50 F g−1 at a current density of 20 A g−1; this fully illustrates the significance of OMC of carbon-based Fe2N composite in improving the energy density. In addition, for supercapacitors, the cyclic stability is another indispensable performance indicator. All the prepared products were run for 1000 charge–discharge cycles at a current density of 1 A g−1, as shown in Fig. 6e. It can be seen that all carbon-based Fe2N composites show excellent cyclic stability after 1000 cycles due to a high specific surface area and the appropriate porous size. Particularly, Fe2N@OMC-2 shows a much higher retention of 85% of the initial capacitance as compared to bare Fe2N, which exhibits only 28% retention. Moreover, it was clearly observed that only a very small amount of Fe2N nanoparticles of Fe2N@OMC-2 accumulated after 1000 cycles (Fig. S4b ESI†) compared to those before 1000 cycles (Fig. S4a ESI†). The stable nanostructure made the Fe2N@OMC-2 electrode have an outstanding cyclic stability. The nanocasting route can achieve a homogeneous dispersion of small non-aggregated Fe2N nanoparticles on the external surface and in the pores of OMC; this has been demonstrated by nitrogen sorption analysis, SEM, TEM, HRTEM, and XPS results. This feature can improve the transport of ions from the bulk electrolyte to the composite material. The collective effect of the two factors, OMC providing more active sites due to the high specific surface area and the high pseudocapacitance of Fe2N, accounts for the outstanding electrochemical performance of the Fe2N@OMC-2 composite as an electrode material for supercapacitors.38
Fig. 5 High-resolution XPS spectra of N 1s of Fe2N@OMC-1 (a), Fe2N@OMC-2 (c), and Fe2N@OMC-3 (e). Fe 2p spectra of Fe2N@OMC-1 (b), Fe2N@OMC-2 (d), and Fe2N@OMC-3 (f). |
The resistive characteristics of electrode materials were analyzed by EIS (Fig. 6f). In the Nyquist plots of OMC, Fe2N@OMC-1, and Fe2N@OMC-2, a small semicircular line corresponding to the interfacial charge-transfer resistance is noticed in the high-frequency region, which indicates that all the samples OMC, Fe2N@OMC-1, and Fe2N@OMC-2 have a small charge-transfer resistance. The slope lines at an angle of 80–90° are observed markedly in the lower frequency region of OMC, Fe2N@OMC-1, and Fe2N@OMC-2, which show an excellent charge–discharge capacitive behavior because of the fast charge-transfer rate from the active electrode material to the current collector.40,43 By contrast, no obvious semicircle is detected for bare Fe2N and Fe2N@OMC-3; this demonstrates the presence of charge-transfer resistance, resulting in a poor rate capability.44 In addition, the slope lines at an angle near 45° for Fe2N and Fe2N@OMC-3 reveal the occurrence of the Warburg impedance, standing for ion-diffusion resistance.40,45 The ion-diffusion resistance of Fe2N and Fe2N@OMC-3 is higher than that of OMC, Fe2N@OMC-1, and Fe2N@OMC-2; this may be caused by the aggregated and bulky particles of Fe2N, making ion diffusion in the electrolyte become more difficult.46 The EIS measurements can further prove that the composite of OMC and small non-aggregated Fe2N particles is advantageous in ion-transport, which plays a significant role in rate performance and specific capacitance.
Different electrolytes can better test the performance of the electrodes.47 The Fe2N@OMC-2 electrode was tested in 1 M LiOH, NaOH, and KOH electrolytes, as shown in Fig. S5 ESI.† It is clear that the redox peaks of CV curves increase in turn as the size of the cations in the electrolytes decreases (K+ > Na+ > Li+). This observation indicates enhanced pseudocapacitive reactions with smaller cations as they are easier to get intercalated into the pores of Fe2N@OMC-2. Moreover, we tested the cyclic stability in different electrolytes (LiOH, NaOH, and KOH). After 1000 cycles, the specific capacitance retention of Fe2N@OMC-2 remained to be 87% in KOH, which was much higher than that in LiOH (67%) and NaOH (72%). This is mainly because the smaller cation is difficult to desorb from the pore of the as-made electrode materials.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c7ra08704g |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |