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Upgrading earth-abundant biomass into three-dimensional carbon materials for energy and environmental applications

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 7, Issue 9, Pages 4217-4229

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8ta12159a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51678162, 41877045, 21876032]
  2. Guangzhou City Science-Technology Project [201707010250]
  3. Major Program of Higher Education of Guangdong [2017KZDXM029]

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The trash to treasure process has been extensively demonstrated for various energy and environmental issues in the past few decades. Abundant biomass is well accepted as a carbon-rich, sustainable, and renewable precursor, offering us a plethora of possibilities for advanced materials for energy conversion and storage as well as environmental treatments; spatial modification of biomass facilitates the formation of a unique three-dimensional (3D) structure with micro- to macropores, yielding higher surface area and enhanced physicochemical properties. This novel concept provides sufficient reaction sites, excellent adsorption capability, more activated sites for catalyst doping, and fascinating electrochemical performance. Basically, the 3D cadre of biomass-derived carbon strengthens the economic competitiveness of these materials and broadens their applications in fields such as in supercapacitors, chemical batteries, bioenergy harvest, adsorbents for organic pollutants and greenhouse gases, and efficient (photo)catalysts. The scope of this review mainly focuses on the most popular synthesis methodology of three-dimensional carbon materials derived from biomass and their critical applications in the fields of energy and environment.

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