Synthesis and Electrochemical Properties of Lignin-Derived High Surface Area Carbons

Activated carbons play an essential role in developing new electrodes for renewable energy devices due to their electrochemical and physical properties. They have been the subject of much research due to their prominent surface areas, porosity, light weight, and excellent conductivity. The performan...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Artur M. Suzanowicz, Youngjin Lee, Abigail Schultz, Otavio J. J. Marques, Hao Lin, Carlo U. Segre, Braja K. Mandal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-04-01
Series:Surfaces
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2571-9637/5/2/19
Description
Summary:Activated carbons play an essential role in developing new electrodes for renewable energy devices due to their electrochemical and physical properties. They have been the subject of much research due to their prominent surface areas, porosity, light weight, and excellent conductivity. The performance of electric double-layer capacitors (EDLCs) is highly related to the morphology of porous carbon electrodes, where high surface area and pore size distribution are proportional to capacitance to a significant extent. In this work, we designed and synthesized several activated carbons based on lignin for both supercapacitors and Li-S batteries. Our most favorable synthesized carbon material had a very high specific surface area (1832 m<sup>2</sup>·g<sup>−1</sup>) and excellent pore diameter (3.6 nm), delivering a specific capacitance of 131 F·g<sup>−1</sup> in our EDLC for the initial cycle. This translates to an energy density of the supercapacitor cell at 55.6 Wh·kg<sup>−1</sup>. Using this material for Li-S cells, composited with a nickel-rich phosphide and sulfur, showed good retention of soluble lithium polysulfide intermediates by maintaining a specific capacity of 545 mA·h·g<sup>−1</sup> for more than 180 cycles at 0.2 C.
ISSN:2571-9637