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      In situ one-step synthesis of hierarchical nitrogen-doped porous carbon for high-performance supercapacitors.

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          Abstract

          A hierarchically structured nitrogen-doped porous carbon is prepared from a nitrogen-containing isoreticular metal-organic framework (IRMOF-3) using a self-sacrificial templating method. IRMOF-3 itself provides the carbon and nitrogen content as well as the porous structure. For high carbonization temperatures (950 °C), the carbonized MOF required no further purification steps, thus eliminating the need for solvents or acid. Nitrogen content and surface area are easily controlled by the carbonization temperature. The nitrogen content decreases from 7 to 3.3 at % as carbonization temperature increases from 600 to 950 °C. There is a distinct trade-off between nitrogen content, porosity, and defects in the carbon structure. Carbonized IRMOFs are evaluated as supercapacitor electrodes. For a carbonization temperature of 950 °C, the nitrogen-doped porous carbon has an exceptionally high capacitance of 239 F g(-1). In comparison, an analogous nitrogen-free carbon bears a low capacitance of 24 F g(-1), demonstrating the importance of nitrogen dopants in the charge storage process. The route is scalable in that multi-gram quantities of nitrogen-doped porous carbons are easily produced.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          ACS Appl Mater Interfaces
          ACS applied materials & interfaces
          1944-8252
          1944-8244
          May 28 2014
          : 6
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Energy & Environment Directorate and §Fundamental Chemical Sciences Directorate Pacific Northwest National Laboratory , 902 Battelle Boulevard, Richland, Washington 99354, United States.
          Article
          10.1021/am500339x
          24784542
          5e597ff6-1e80-4ffd-ae49-37e3250af31c
          History

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