The nanostructure design of porous carbon-based electrode materials is key to improving the electrochemical performance of supercapacitors. In this study, hierarchically porous carbon nanosheets (HP-CNSs) were fabricated using waste coffee grounds by in situ carbonization and activation processes using KOH. Despite the simple synthesis process, the HP-CNSs had a high aspect ratio nanostructure (∼20 nm thickness to several micrometers in lateral size), a high specific surface area of 1945.7 m(2) g(-1), numerous heteroatoms, and good electrical transport properties, as well as hierarchically porous characteristics (0.5-10 nm in size). HP-CNS-based supercapacitors showed a specific energy of 35.4 Wh kg(-1) at 11250 W kg(-1) and of 23 Wh kg(-1) for a 3 s charge/discharge current rate corresponding to a specific power of 30000 W kg(-1). Additionally, the HP-CNS supercapacitors demonstrated good cyclic performance over 5000 cycles.
Pyroprotein-based carbon nanoplates are fabricated from self-assembled silk proteins as a versatile platform to examine sodium-ion storage characteristics in various carbon environments. It is found that, depending on the local carbon structure, sodium ions are stored via chemi-/physisorption, insertion, or nanoclustering of metallic sodium.
We
have developed a novel, all-electronic biosensor for opioids that
consists of an engineered μ-opioid receptor protein, with high
binding affinity for opioids, chemically bonded to a graphene field-effect
transistor to read out ligand binding. A variant of the receptor protein
that provided chemical recognition was computationally redesigned
to enhance its solubility and stability in an aqueous environment.
A shadow mask process was developed to fabricate arrays of hundreds
of graphene transistors with average mobility of ∼1500 cm2 V–1 s–1 and yield exceeding
98%. The biosensor exhibits high sensitivity and selectivity for the
target naltrexone, an opioid receptor antagonist, with a detection
limit of 10 pg/mL.
Graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) are promising
candidates for next generation
integrated circuit (IC) components; this fact motivates exploration
of the relationship between crystallographic structure and transport
of graphene patterned at IC-relevant length scales (<10 nm). We
report on the controlled fabrication of pristine, freestanding GNRs
with widths as small as 0.7 nm, paired with simultaneous lattice-resolution
imaging and electrical transport characterization, all conducted within
an aberration-corrected transmission electron microscope. Few-layer
GNRs very frequently formed bonded-bilayers and were remarkably robust,
sustaining currents in excess of 1.5 μA per carbon bond across
a 5 atom-wide ribbon. We found that the intrinsic conductance of a
sub-10 nm bonded bilayer GNR scaled with width as GBL(w) ≈ 3/4(e2/h)w, where w is the width in nanometers, while a monolayer GNR was
roughly five times less conductive. Nanosculpted, crystalline monolayer
GNRs exhibited armchair-terminated edges after current annealing,
presenting a pathway for the controlled fabrication of semiconducting
GNRs with known edge geometry. Finally, we report on simulations of
quantum transport in GNRs that are in qualitative agreement with the
observations.
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