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Biowaste-derived carbon black applied to polyaniline-based high-performance supercapacitor microelectrodes: Sustainable materials for renewable energy applications

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Resumo:Biowaste, derived from cooking-oven-produced carbon nanoparticles (WCP), are incorporated into polyaniline (PANI) via in-situ chemical oxidative polymerization to achieve excellent electrochemical properties for application in supercapacitors. The WCP-PANI composite electrodes have shown high-performance charge storage, due to combinatorial effect of electrical double layer capacitance from WCP and pseudocapacitance from PANI. With increase in the WCP percolation, work function of PANI is increased, which improves the charge-trapping capabilities of composites. For such distinct charge-trapping mechanism, areal capacitance of the composite microelectrode remains near-constant with increase in scan rate or current density. This indicates the suppression of diffusion limitations at higher scan rates to considerably enhance the rate capability. Also, with increasing polymerization time, strong interaction in this conjugated system greatly improves the charge-transfer reaction between PANI and WCP. The areal capacitance of the composite electrode is found to increase more than 600 times over pure PANI electrode. Moreover, energy-power performance of the microelectrode reveals almost 550% increment in the power density with a mere 1% decrement in energy density. Such rationally synthesized WCP-PANI composite electrodes using biowaste carbon nanomaterials, provide opportunities for the development of next-generation green-supercapacitors with improved energy storage performance.
Autores principais:Goswami, Sumita
Outros Autores:Dillip, Gowra Raghupathy; Nandy, Suman; Banerjee, Arghya Narayan; Pimentel, Ana; Joo, Sang Woo; Martins, Rodrigo; Fortunato, Elvira
Assunto:Biowastes Carbon materials Polyaniline Supercapacitors Sustainable materials General Chemical Engineering Electrochemistry General Energy General Materials Science SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy
Ano:2019
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório Institucional da UNL
Descrição
Resumo:Biowaste, derived from cooking-oven-produced carbon nanoparticles (WCP), are incorporated into polyaniline (PANI) via in-situ chemical oxidative polymerization to achieve excellent electrochemical properties for application in supercapacitors. The WCP-PANI composite electrodes have shown high-performance charge storage, due to combinatorial effect of electrical double layer capacitance from WCP and pseudocapacitance from PANI. With increase in the WCP percolation, work function of PANI is increased, which improves the charge-trapping capabilities of composites. For such distinct charge-trapping mechanism, areal capacitance of the composite microelectrode remains near-constant with increase in scan rate or current density. This indicates the suppression of diffusion limitations at higher scan rates to considerably enhance the rate capability. Also, with increasing polymerization time, strong interaction in this conjugated system greatly improves the charge-transfer reaction between PANI and WCP. The areal capacitance of the composite electrode is found to increase more than 600 times over pure PANI electrode. Moreover, energy-power performance of the microelectrode reveals almost 550% increment in the power density with a mere 1% decrement in energy density. Such rationally synthesized WCP-PANI composite electrodes using biowaste carbon nanomaterials, provide opportunities for the development of next-generation green-supercapacitors with improved energy storage performance.