Abstract

An electroactive nitrogen-doping tin dioxide nanorod array (N-SnO2NRA) is designed as an effective energy-storage electrode material for supercapacitor applications. N-SnO2supported on a carbon fiber substrate is prepared using SnCl4as a precursor through hydrolysis, hydrothermal growth, and an NH3-nitriding process. Electroactive N-SnO2is formed by an N-doping reaction between Sn(OH)4and NH3, revealing a high nitrogen-doping level of 12.5% in N-SnO2. N-SnO2/carbon fiber reveals a lower ohmic resistance and charge transfer resistance than SnO2/carbon fiber, which is consistent with its higher current response and lower voltage drop in electrochemical measurements. N-SnO2NRA has an independent nanoarray structure and a small side length of a quadrangular nanorod, contributing to a more accessible interspace, reactive sites, and feasible electrolyte ion diffusion. The N-SnO2/carbon fiber NRA electrode shows higher specific capacitance (105.4 F g−1at 0.5 A g−1) and rate capacitance retention (45.0% from 0.5 to 5 A g−1) than a SnO2/carbon fiber NRA electrode (58.6 F g−1, 38.4%). Significantly, the cycling capacitance retention after 2000 cycles increases from 78.1% of SnO2/carbon fiber to 98.8% of N-SnO2/carbon fiber, presenting a superior electrochemical cycling stability. The N-SnO2supercapacitor maintains stable power working at an output voltage of 1.6 V. The specific capacitance decreases from 75.2 to 55.1 F g−1when the current density increases from 1 to 10 A g−1. The corresponding energy density decreases from 24.23 to 9.81 Wh kg−1, presenting a reasonable rate capability. So, the prepared N-SnO2nanorod array demonstrates superior capacitance performance for energy-storage applications.

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