5 research outputs found
Hydrophobic Molecule Monolayer Brush-Tethered Zinc Anodes for Aqueous Zinc Batteries
Aqueous
zinc batteries are of great interest as a rechargeable
energy storage system, particularly owing to the low cost and high
safety of aqueous electrolytes, as well as the high capacity of zinc
anodes. Unfortunately, the wide commercialization of aqueous zinc
batteries is impeded by the irreversible water reduction and irregular
zinc evolution issues on the anode side. Hereby, a hydrophobic and
ultrathin polystyrene molecule brush layer is tethered onto the surface
of zinc metal anodes to tackle the above limitations. Experimental
investigations reveal that the waterproof artificial layer can sustain
fast interfacial ionic transportation, minimize hydrogen evolution,
and smoothen Zn deposition, thus conferring enhanced electrochemical
performance to the as-protected Zn anode in both symmetric Zn//Zn
cells and Zn//LiV3O8 full cells
Hydrophobic Molecule Monolayer Brush-Tethered Zinc Anodes for Aqueous Zinc Batteries
Aqueous
zinc batteries are of great interest as a rechargeable
energy storage system, particularly owing to the low cost and high
safety of aqueous electrolytes, as well as the high capacity of zinc
anodes. Unfortunately, the wide commercialization of aqueous zinc
batteries is impeded by the irreversible water reduction and irregular
zinc evolution issues on the anode side. Hereby, a hydrophobic and
ultrathin polystyrene molecule brush layer is tethered onto the surface
of zinc metal anodes to tackle the above limitations. Experimental
investigations reveal that the waterproof artificial layer can sustain
fast interfacial ionic transportation, minimize hydrogen evolution,
and smoothen Zn deposition, thus conferring enhanced electrochemical
performance to the as-protected Zn anode in both symmetric Zn//Zn
cells and Zn//LiV3O8 full cells
Hydrophobic Molecule Monolayer Brush-Tethered Zinc Anodes for Aqueous Zinc Batteries
Aqueous
zinc batteries are of great interest as a rechargeable
energy storage system, particularly owing to the low cost and high
safety of aqueous electrolytes, as well as the high capacity of zinc
anodes. Unfortunately, the wide commercialization of aqueous zinc
batteries is impeded by the irreversible water reduction and irregular
zinc evolution issues on the anode side. Hereby, a hydrophobic and
ultrathin polystyrene molecule brush layer is tethered onto the surface
of zinc metal anodes to tackle the above limitations. Experimental
investigations reveal that the waterproof artificial layer can sustain
fast interfacial ionic transportation, minimize hydrogen evolution,
and smoothen Zn deposition, thus conferring enhanced electrochemical
performance to the as-protected Zn anode in both symmetric Zn//Zn
cells and Zn//LiV3O8 full cells
Enhanced Hybridization and Nanopatterning via Heated Liquid-Phase Infiltration into Self-Assembled Block Copolymer Thin Films
Organic–inorganic hybrids featuring tunable material
properties can be readily generated by applying vapor- or liquid-phase
infiltration (VPI or LPI) of inorganic materials into organic templates,
with resulting properties controlled by type and quantity of infiltrated
inorganics. While LPI offers more diverse choices of infiltratable
elements, it tends to yield smaller infiltration amount than VPI,
but the attempt to address the issue has been rarely reported. Here,
we demonstrate a facile temperature-enhanced LPI method to control
and drastically increase the quantity and kinetics of Pt infiltration
into self-assembled polystyrene-block-poly(2-vinylpyridine)
block copolymer (BCP) thin films. By applying LPI at mildly elevated
temperatures (40–80 °C), we showcase controllable optical
functionality of hybrid BCP films along with conductive three-dimensional
(3D) inorganic nanostructures. Structural analysis reveals enhanced
metal loading into the BCP matrix at higher LPI temperatures, suggesting
multiple metal ion infiltration per monomer of P2VP. Combining temperature-enhanced
LPI with hierarchical multilayer BCP self-assembly, we generate BCP-metal
hybrid optical coatings featuring tunable antireflective properties
as well as scalable conductive 3D Pt nanomesh structures. Enhanced
material infiltration and control by temperature-enhanced LPI not
only enables tunability of organic–inorganic hybrid nanostructures
and properties but also expands the application of BCPs for generating
uniquely functional inorganic nanostructures
Top-down fabrication of high-uniformity nanodiamonds by self-assembled block copolymer masks
Nanodiamonds hosting colour centres are a promising material platform for various quantum technologies. The fabrication of non-aggregated and uniformly-sized nanodiamonds with systematic integration of single quantum emitters has so far been lacking. Here, we present a top-down fabrication method to produce 30.05.4 nm uniformly-sized single-crystal nanodiamonds by block copolymer self-assembled nanomask patterning together with directional and isotropic reactive ion etching. We show detected emission from bright single nitrogen vacancy centres hosted in the fabricated nanodiamonds. The lithographically precise patterning of large areas of diamond by self-assembled masks and their release into uniformly sized nanodiamonds open up new possibilities for quantum information processing and sensing
