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Título
Electrical conductivity of activated carbon–metal oxide nanocomposites under compression: a comparison study
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Conductividad
Carbón activo
Clasificación UNESCO
2303 Química Inorgánica
3321 Tecnología del Carbón y del Petróleo
Fecha de publicación
2014
Editor
The Royal Society of Chemistry
Citación
Barroso-Bogeat, A., Alexandre-Franco, M., Fernández-González, C., Macías-García, A., Gómez-Serrano, V. (2014). Electrical conductivity of activated carbon–metal oxide nanocomposites under compression: a comparison study, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 16(45) pp 25161-25175. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4cp03952a
Resumen
[EN] From a granular commercial activated carbon (AC) and six metal oxide (Al2O3, Fe2O3, SnO2, TiO2, WO3 and
ZnO) precursors, two series of AC–metal oxide nanocomposites were prepared by wet impregnation,
oven-drying at 120 1C, and subsequent heat treatment at 200 or 850 1C in an inert atmosphere. Here, the
electrical conductivity of the resulting products was studied under moderate compression. The influence of
the applied pressure, sample volume, mechanical work, and density of the hybrid materials was thoroughly
investigated. The DC electrical conductivity of the compressed samples was measured at room temperature
by the four-probe method. Compaction assays suggest that the mechanical properties of the nanocomposites
are largely determined by the carbon matrix. Both the decrease in volume and the increase in density were
relatively small and only significant at pressures lower than 100 kPa for AC and most nanocomposites.
In contrast, the bulk electrical conductivity of the hybrid materials was strongly influenced by the intrinsic
conductivity, mean crystallite size, content and chemical nature of the supported phases, which ultimately
depend on the metal oxide precursor and heat treatment temperature. The supported nanoparticles may
be considered to act as electrical switches either hindering or favouring the effective electron transport
between the AC cores of neighbouring composite particles in contact under compression. Conductivity
values as a rule were lower for the nanocomposites than for the raw AC, all of them falling in the range of
semiconductor materials. With the increase in heat treatment temperature, the trend is toward the
improvement of conductivity due to the increase in the crystallite size and, in some cases, to the formation of
metals in the elemental state and even metal carbides. The patterns of variation of the electrical conductivity
with pressure and mechanical work were slightly similar, thus suggesting the predominance of the pressure
effects rather than the volume ones.
URI
ISSN
1463-9076
DOI
10.1039/c4cp03952a
Versión del editor
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