Quasi-aligned cylindrical and conical core-shell nanofibers consisting of carbon shells and TiO(2) nanowire cores are produced in situ on Ti foils without using a foreign metallic catalyst and template. A cylindrical nanofiber has a TiO(2) nanowire core 30-50 nm in diameter and a 5-10 nm-thick cylindrical carbon shell, while in the conical nanostructure the TiO(2) nanowire core has a diameter of 20-40 nm and the thickness of the carbon shell varies from about 200 nm at the bottom to about 5 nm at the tip. Electrochemical analysis reveals well-defined redox peaks of the [Fe(CN)(6)](3-/4-) redox couple and heterogeneous charge-transfer rate constants of 0.010 and 0.062 cm  s(-1) for the cylindrical and conical nanofibers, respectively. The coverage of exposed edge planes on the cylindrical and conical carbon shells is estimated to be 2.5 and 15.5 % respectively. The more abundant exposed edge planes on the conical nanofiber decrease the overpotential and increase the voltammetric resolution during electrochemical detection of uric acid and ascorbic acid. Our results suggest that the density of edge-plane sites estimated from Raman scattering is not necessarily equal to the density of exposed edge-plane sites, and only carbon electrodes with a large density of exposed edge planes or free graphene sheet ends exhibit better electrochemical performance.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chem.201102219DOI Listing

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