4.7 Article

Carbon Nanomaterials Made from Supramolecular Hybridization of Cucurbit[6]uril with Phosphomolybdic Acid for Supercapacitors

Journal

ACS APPLIED NANO MATERIALS
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages 2459-2471

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsanm.2c04737

Keywords

cucurbituril; supramolecular chemistry; carbon nanomaterials; capacitance retention; coulombic efficiency

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Carbonaceous nanomaterials are prepared as super-capacitor electrode materials using supramolecular synthesis. These materials have high electronic conductivity, large specific surface area, and low cost. By carbonization at different temperatures, N, O, P, and Mo-enriched carbon nanomaterials with mesoporous structures are obtained.
Carbonaceous nanomaterials are attractive as super-capacitor electrode materials due to their high electronic conductivity, large specific surface area, and low cost. This study prepared a supramolecular carbon source (Q[6]-PMA) via a facile one-pot supramolecular synthesis with cucurbit[6]uril (Q[6]) and phosphomolybdic acid (PMA). Further carbonization of Q[6]-PMA at various temperatures produced N, O, P, and Mo-enriched carbon nanomaterials, Q[6]-PMAC-Xs, whose N and Mo contents were 14.08-24.67 and 24.03-51.91%, respectively. The product's mesoporous surface area was 243.2-376.2 m2 g-1. A symmetric supercapacitor device with Q[6]-PMAC-600 as electrodes achieved a stable cycle performance with 106.9% capacitance retention and 96.88% coulombic efficiency after 10,000 cycles. The super-capacitor device exhibited a specific capacitance (Csp) of 132.34 F g-1, the highest energy density of 36.03 W h kg-1 at a power density of 560 W kg-1, and a current density of 0.2 A g-1 in a 1.0 M KCl electrolyte. In this case, the organic/inorganic hybridization with supramolecular interactions successfully explored a pathway for carbon nanomaterials.

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