| Literature DB >> 32318893 |
Xiaoxia Bai1, Zhe Wang1, Jingying Luo1, Weiwei Wu1, Yanping Liang1, Xin Tong2, Zhenhuan Zhao3.
Abstract
Using biowastes as precursors for the preparation of value-added nanomaterials is critical to the sustainable development of devices. Lignosulphonates are the by-products of pulp and paper-making industries and usually discarded as wastes. In the present study, lignosulphonate is used as the precursor to prepare hierarchical ordered porous carbon with interconnected pores for the electrochemical energy storage application. The unique molecular structure and properties of lignosulphonate ensure the acquisition of high-quality porous carbon with a controllable pore structure and improved physical properties. As a result, the as-prepared hierarchical order porous carbon show excellent energy storage performance when used to assemble the symmetric supercapacitor, which exhibits high-specific capacitance of 289 F g-1 at a current density of 0.5 A g-1, with the energy density of 40 Wh kg-1 at the power density of 900 W kg-1. The present study provides a promising strategy for the fabrication of high-performance energy storage devices at low cost.Entities:
Keywords: Biowaste; Hierarchical porous carbon; KIT-6; Supercapacitor
Year: 2020 PMID: 32318893 PMCID: PMC7174449 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-020-03305-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1Illustration of the synthetic processes of hierarchical ordered porous carbon (HOPC) using the hard template method combined with post chemical activation
Fig. 2Characterization of the prepared KIT-6 silica template, a Low-angle XRD pattern of KIT-6 silica template. b N2 adsorption/desorption isotherm of KIT-6 template. c The corresponding pore size distribution for N2 calculated using a slit pore NLDFT model. TEM images of (d) KIT-6 silica, the OMC carbon samples prepared at (e) 700 oC, (f) 800 oC, and (g) 900 oC, and the HOPC sample (h–i). The insert images are the corresponding Fast Fourier Transform patterns of the selected areas
Fig. 3Characterization of the as-prepared OMC carbon and the HOPC samples. a The specific surface area, total pore volume, micropore volume, and mesopore volume as the function of carbonization temperature. b Raman spectra
Fig. 4a Cyclic voltammetry (CV) profiles of the OMC-700, OMC-800, OMC-900, OMC-1000, and HOPC electrodes at a scan rate of 2 mV s−1 using the three-electrode configuration and b corresponding specific capacitance. c CV profiles of the HOPC electrode in the symmetric two-electrode supercapacitor at scan rates varying from 2 mV s−1 to 100 mV s−1 in 6 M KOH aqueous electrolyte. d Charge-discharge curves at different current density from 0.5 A g−1 to 10 A g−1. e Specific capacitance calculated from the discharge curves from the charge-discharge testing. f Ragone plots showing the energy density as a function of power density