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      Surface-engineered N-doped carbon nanotubes with B-doped graphene quantum dots: Strategies to develop highly-efficient noble metal-free electrocatalyst for online-monitoring dissolved oxygen biosensor

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          Nitrogen-doped carbon nanotube arrays with high electrocatalytic activity for oxygen reduction.

          The large-scale practical application of fuel cells will be difficult to realize if the expensive platinum-based electrocatalysts for oxygen reduction reactions (ORRs) cannot be replaced by other efficient, low-cost, and stable electrodes. Here, we report that vertically aligned nitrogen-containing carbon nanotubes (VA-NCNTs) can act as a metal-free electrode with a much better electrocatalytic activity, long-term operation stability, and tolerance to crossover effect than platinum for oxygen reduction in alkaline fuel cells. In air-saturated 0.1 molar potassium hydroxide, we observed a steady-state output potential of -80 millivolts and a current density of 4.1 milliamps per square centimeter at -0.22 volts, compared with -85 millivolts and 1.1 milliamps per square centimeter at -0.20 volts for a platinum-carbon electrode. The incorporation of electron-accepting nitrogen atoms in the conjugated nanotube carbon plane appears to impart a relatively high positive charge density on adjacent carbon atoms. This effect, coupled with aligning the NCNTs, provides a four-electron pathway for the ORR on VA-NCNTs with a superb performance.
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            Dispersion and functionalization of carbon nanotubes for polymer-based nanocomposites: A review

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              Graphene quantum dots derived from carbon fibers.

              Graphene quantum dots (GQDs), which are edge-bound nanometer-size graphene pieces, have fascinating optical and electronic properties. These have been synthesized either by nanolithography or from starting materials such as graphene oxide (GO) by the chemical breakdown of their extended planar structure, both of which are multistep tedious processes. Here, we report that during the acid treatment and chemical exfoliation of traditional pitch-based carbon fibers, that are both cheap and commercially available, the stacked graphitic submicrometer domains of the fibers are easily broken down, leading to the creation of GQDs with different size distribution in scalable amounts. The as-produced GQDs, in the size range of 1-4 nm, show two-dimensional morphology, most of which present zigzag edge structure, and are 1-3 atomic layers thick. The photoluminescence of the GQDs can be tailored through varying the size of the GQDs by changing process parameters. Due to the luminescence stability, nanosecond lifetime, biocompatibility, low toxicity, and high water solubility, these GQDs are demonstrated to be excellent probes for high contrast bioimaging and biosensing applications. © 2012 American Chemical Society
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Carbon
                Carbon
                Elsevier BV
                00086223
                January 2022
                January 2022
                : 186
                : 406-415
                Article
                10.1016/j.carbon.2021.10.027
                dad09041-a522-4082-89cf-0b0aa85eaa74
                © 2022

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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