4.4 Article

Nitrogen Self-Doped Porous Carbon Materials Derived from a New Biomass Source for Highly Stable Supercapacitors

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ELECTROCHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages 12084-12097

Publisher

ESG
DOI: 10.20964/2017.12.400

Keywords

Porous carbon; Nitrogen self-doping; Electrode material; Supercapacitor; Cycle stability

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundations of China [21706048, U1632151]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2016M590565]
  3. Fundamental Research Fund for the Central Universities [JZ2016HGTA0683]
  4. Startup Foundation of Hefei University of Technology [JZ2015HGBZ0530, XC2016JZBZ06]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Nitrogen self-doped porous carbon materials with large surface area and excellent cycle stability are successfully synthesized from the waste of Pteroceltis tatarinowii Maxim (PTM) bark for the first time. During the synthesis procedure, ethanol is introduced to ensure a homogeneous mixture and good contact of the precarbonized PTM bark with the activating agent (KOH or ZnCl2), resulting in a unique porous structure. The obtained KOH activated carbon (K-AC) possesses a hierarchical porous structure with a high specific surface area of 1721 m(2) g(-1) and small amount of nitrogen (0.3 wt%). Interestingly, ZnCl2-activated carbon (Zn-AC) shows a micropore structure with a narrow pore size distribution (0.5-2.0 nm) and a higher nitrogen content of 3.0 wt%. The electrochemical measurement results demonstrate that the as-prepared Zn-AC exhibits a high specific capacitance of 206 F g(-1) at a current density of 0.5 A g(-1), good rate performance and excellent cycle stability with capacitance retention of 99% over 10,000 cycles. In contrast, K-AC retains only approximately 89% of the initial capacitance value after 10,000 cycles. Thus, such waste PTM bark-derived carbon material, obtained by the ZnCl2 activated method, is a promising candidate material as an electrode for highly stable supercapacitors.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available