Strategies for liquid-liquid extraction of oxide particles for applications in supercapacitor electrodes and thin films.

J Colloid Interface Sci

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4L7, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: August 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Bottom-up and top-down liquid-liquid extraction methods were developed to transfer colloidal metal oxide particles from water to organic phases without agglomeration during drying.
  • Hexadecylamine was used in both methods for manganese oxide (MnO) extraction, leading to better mixing in composite electrodes with carbon nanotubes for supercapacitors, achieving high active mass and improved electrochemical performance.
  • A novel strategy also involved modifying titania particles during synthesis, enabling strong bonding and successful particle extraction, which could enhance the fabrication of advanced films and devices without agglomeration.

Article Abstract

Bottom-up and top-down liquid-liquid extraction methods have been developed for the transfer of colloidal metal oxide particles, synthesized in an aqueous phase, to organic phases. In such methods the agglomeration of the particles during the drying stage was avoided. Hexadecylamine was used as an extractor for MnO particles in the bottom-up extraction to the 1-butanol phase and top-down extraction to the dichloromethane phase. The reduction of particle agglomeration facilitated the fabrication of MnO-carbon nanotube composite electrodes for electrochemical supercapacitors with enhanced mixing of the individual components and active mass as high as 35mgcm. Electrochemical testing results showed superior performance of the composite MnO-carbon nanotube electrodes, prepared by the bottom-up strategy. The new strategies allowed the fabrication of advanced electrodes, which showed a capacitance of 5.48Fcm at a scan rate of 2mVs, good capacitance retention at high scan rates and low resistance. In another conceptually new bottom-up strategy colloidal titania particles were modified during synthesis with 2,3,4-trihydroxybenzaldehyde, which allowed strong catecholate-type bonding to the Ti atoms on the particle surface. The Schiff base reaction with hexadecylamine at the liquid-liquid interface allowed for particle extraction. The extraction strategies developed in this investigation pave the way for agglomerate-free processing of advanced films, coatings and devices by colloidal methods.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2017.03.095DOI Listing

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