Abstract

The effective addition of surface oxygen groups, which are active sites for redox reactions, on carbon clothes as electrodes by electron beam irradiation in normal air which contains environmental humidity, dry air, or nitrogen atmosphere was carried out. The irradiation introduced 20 at% oxygen at the carbon surface as determined by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and the phenol-type hydroxyl group, the carboxylic group, etc., were detected by temperature-programmed desorption. Single-cell measurements indicated the current density at 1.3 V-IR-corrected of the irradiated electrode in normal air was 28% higher than that of the as-received electrode. Since double-layer capacitance between the as-received carbon cloth and irradiated carbon cloth in normal air was similar, the improvement of current density is attributed to the increase of surface oxygen groups. In addition, the radiation in both normal air and dry air improved electrochemical activity similarly. This result suggests the radiation-chemical reaction in this study is dominated by the oxidation reaction with ozone or nitrogen oxides (NOx), while in the meantime, the contribution of the hydroxyl radical from water is considered to be negligible.

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