Title Iron oxide-based nanotube arrays derived from sacrificial template-accelerated hydrolysis: large-area design and reversible lithium storage
Authors 黄新堂
Issue Date 2010
Publisher CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
metadata.dc.description.sponsorship Agency Grant Number National Natural Science Foundation of China 50872039 50802032 View funding textClose funding text The authors appreciate the Financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (50872039; 50802032). The authors also thank Prof. J. B. Wang at Wuhan University for his kind assistance in the EELS Measurement
Abstract Abstract We report a novel "sacrificial template-accelerated hydrolysis" (STAH) approach to the synthesis of iron oxide-based nanotube arrays including hematite alpha-Fe2O3 and magnetite Fe3O4 on centimeter-scale conducting alloy substrates. ZnO nanowire arrays are chosen its the inexpensive and sacrificial templates that do not contribute to the component of final iron oxide nanotubes but can be in situ dissolved by the acid produced from the Fe3+ precursor hydrolysis. interestingly, the ZnO template dissolution in turn accelerates the Fe3+ hydrolysis, which is essential to initiating the nanotube formation. Such a STAH approach provides a morphology-reservation transformation, when various shaped ZnO templates are adopted. Moreover, by introducing glucose into the precursor solution, we also successfully obtain carbon/hematite(C/alpha-Fe2O3) composite nanotube arrays on large-area flexible alloy substrate, with a large number of pores and uniform carbon distribution at a nanoscale in the nanotube walls. These arrays have been demonstrated as excellent additive-free anode materials for lithium ion batteries in terms of good cycling performance up to 150 times (659 mA h g(-1)) and outstanding rate capability. Our result presents not only a new route for inorganic nanotube formation but also an insight for rational design of advanced electrode materials for electrochemical batteries and sensors
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