Evaluation of Activated Carbon and Platinum Black as High-Capacitance Materials for Platinum Electrodes
<p>CV of CI electrode. Image is taken from CorrView (Scribner Associates, Southern Pines, NC, USA). The CV is graphed as I (current) vs. E (voltage). The Q value is an estimate of the average of the area of the red region and the area of the blue region.</p> "> Figure 2
<p>CV of platinum black electrode. Image is taken from the program CorrView (Scribner Associates). The CV is graphed as I (current) vs. E (voltage). The areas under the curve designated in red are averaged together to determine the appropriate Q value. Charge is determined by integrating over this region.</p> "> Figure 3
<p>Fifteen CI electrodes were fabricated at different CI concentrations and volumes (indicated as red, green and blue). The molarity of activated carbon was calculated for each electrode concentration. An upward trend in Q value is shown for increases in concentration. α = 0.05.</p> "> Figure 4
<p>A box plot of the initial Q values for all tested electrodes. A one-way ANOVA found no statistically significant differences between CI binder concentrations (plus, minus, and regular) when PtB electrodes were omitted.</p> "> Figure 5
<p>CI soak trials were plotted as Q% with stabilized value vs. time soaking (days). Stabilized values were derived from initial Q value analysis. A quadratic line of best fit was fit to the data (Y = 0.9078 + 0.004776x − 0.000131 × 2). The horizontal line at 90% represents the failure threshold. α = 0.05. The data points, indicated by the red box, demonstrated two electrodes with premature and abrupt Q value decreases.</p> "> Figure 6
<p>PtB soak trials were plotted as Q% with stabilized vs. time soaking (days) in. Stabilized values were derived from initial Q value analysis. A quadratic line of best fit was fit to the data (Y = 0.8979 + 0.00605x − 0.000152 × 2). The horizontal line at 90% represents the failure threshold. α = 0.05.</p> "> Figure 7
<p>Weibull life distribution analysis of HCM groups. Binder concentrations for CI-Plus and CI-Minus are +60% and −60% binder. The shaded area represents the confidence interval of each analysis.</p> "> Figure 8
<p>CI electrodes were separated by their CI volume (4 μL and 8 μL). Life distribution analysis produced a probability of failure model. Binder concentrations for CI-Plus and CI-Minus are +60% and −60% binder. Confidence intervals represented by shaded area. α = 0.05.</p> "> Figure 9
<p>Life distribution analysis. Shaded areas indicate respective confidence interval (CI = 0.95). Distribution lognormal.</p> ">
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Monopolar Electrode Design
2.2. Cyclic Voltammogram
2.3. Activated CI Electrodes
- Prepare binder solution by dissolving 1.0 g of PVDF in 9.0 g of NMP and stir with magnetic stir bar until PVDF powder is fully dissolved;
- Combine 3.0 g of YP-50 and 6.0 g of NMP into a vial with magnetic stirrer;
- Add 3.0 g of binder solution dropwise to YP-50 and NMP dispersion (created in step 2);
- Stir resulting mixture for 2 h with magnetic stir bar.
2.4. CI Binder Concentration Study
2.5. Platinum Black Electrodes
2.6. Nafion™ (Sulfonated Tetrafluoroethylene Based Fluoropolymer-Copolymer)
2.7. Testing Q Value Resilience (Soak, Vibrate, and Bend Tests)
2.7.1. Soak Test
2.7.2. Vibrate and Bend Tests
2.8. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. CI Binder Concentration Study
3.2. High-Capacitance Material Electrodes Initial Q Value
3.3. Soak Test
3.4. Vibrate Test
3.5. Bend Test Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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HCM | N | Mean of Initial Q | SE |
---|---|---|---|
CI-Minus | 23 | 53.71 | 5.72 |
CI-Regular | 20 | 46.4 | 6.14 |
CI-Plus | 21 | 44.96 | 5.99 |
PtB | 16 | 17.85 | 6.14 |
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Goh, A.; Roberts, D.; Wainright, J.; Bhadra, N.; Kilgore, K.; Bhadra, N.; Vrabec, T. Evaluation of Activated Carbon and Platinum Black as High-Capacitance Materials for Platinum Electrodes. Sensors 2022, 22, 4278. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22114278
Goh A, Roberts D, Wainright J, Bhadra N, Kilgore K, Bhadra N, Vrabec T. Evaluation of Activated Carbon and Platinum Black as High-Capacitance Materials for Platinum Electrodes. Sensors. 2022; 22(11):4278. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22114278
Chicago/Turabian StyleGoh, Andrew, David Roberts, Jesse Wainright, Narendra Bhadra, Kevin Kilgore, Niloy Bhadra, and Tina Vrabec. 2022. "Evaluation of Activated Carbon and Platinum Black as High-Capacitance Materials for Platinum Electrodes" Sensors 22, no. 11: 4278. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22114278
APA StyleGoh, A., Roberts, D., Wainright, J., Bhadra, N., Kilgore, K., Bhadra, N., & Vrabec, T. (2022). Evaluation of Activated Carbon and Platinum Black as High-Capacitance Materials for Platinum Electrodes. Sensors, 22(11), 4278. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22114278