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Nanoarchitectonics of Lotus Seed Derived Nanoporous Carbon Materials for Supercapacitor Applications

Of the available environmentally friendly energy storage devices, supercapacitors are the most promising because of their high energy density, ultra-fast charging-discharging rate, outstanding cycle life, cost-effectiveness, and safety. In this work, nanoporous carbon materials were prepared by appl...

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Autores principales: Shrestha, Ram Lal, Chaudhary, Rashma, Shrestha, Timila, Tamrakar, Birendra Man, Shrestha, Rekha Goswami, Maji, Subrata, Hill, Jonathan P., Ariga, Katsuhiko, Shrestha, Lok Kumar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7730822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33260344
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma13235434
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author Shrestha, Ram Lal
Chaudhary, Rashma
Shrestha, Timila
Tamrakar, Birendra Man
Shrestha, Rekha Goswami
Maji, Subrata
Hill, Jonathan P.
Ariga, Katsuhiko
Shrestha, Lok Kumar
author_facet Shrestha, Ram Lal
Chaudhary, Rashma
Shrestha, Timila
Tamrakar, Birendra Man
Shrestha, Rekha Goswami
Maji, Subrata
Hill, Jonathan P.
Ariga, Katsuhiko
Shrestha, Lok Kumar
author_sort Shrestha, Ram Lal
collection PubMed
description Of the available environmentally friendly energy storage devices, supercapacitors are the most promising because of their high energy density, ultra-fast charging-discharging rate, outstanding cycle life, cost-effectiveness, and safety. In this work, nanoporous carbon materials were prepared by applying zinc chloride activation of lotus seed powder from 600 °C to 1000 °C and the electrochemical energy storage (supercapacitance) of the resulting materials in aqueous electrolyte (1M H(2)SO(4)) are reported. Lotus seed-derived activated carbon materials display hierarchically porous structures comprised of micropore and mesopore architectures, and exhibited excellent supercapacitance performances. The specific surface areas and pore volumes were found in the ranges 1103.0–1316.7 m(2) g(−1) and 0.741–0.887 cm(3) g(−1), respectively. The specific capacitance of the optimum sample was ca. 317.5 F g(−1) at 5 mV s(−1) and 272.9 F g(−1) at 1 A g(−1) accompanied by high capacitance retention of 70.49% at a high potential sweep rate of 500 mV s(−1). The electrode also showed good rate capability of 52.1% upon increasing current density from 1 to 50 A g(−1) with exceptional cyclic stability of 99.2% after 10,000 cycles demonstrating the excellent prospects for agricultural waste stuffs, such as lotus seed, in the production of the high performance porous carbon materials required for supercapacitor applications.
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spelling pubmed-77308222020-12-12 Nanoarchitectonics of Lotus Seed Derived Nanoporous Carbon Materials for Supercapacitor Applications Shrestha, Ram Lal Chaudhary, Rashma Shrestha, Timila Tamrakar, Birendra Man Shrestha, Rekha Goswami Maji, Subrata Hill, Jonathan P. Ariga, Katsuhiko Shrestha, Lok Kumar Materials (Basel) Article Of the available environmentally friendly energy storage devices, supercapacitors are the most promising because of their high energy density, ultra-fast charging-discharging rate, outstanding cycle life, cost-effectiveness, and safety. In this work, nanoporous carbon materials were prepared by applying zinc chloride activation of lotus seed powder from 600 °C to 1000 °C and the electrochemical energy storage (supercapacitance) of the resulting materials in aqueous electrolyte (1M H(2)SO(4)) are reported. Lotus seed-derived activated carbon materials display hierarchically porous structures comprised of micropore and mesopore architectures, and exhibited excellent supercapacitance performances. The specific surface areas and pore volumes were found in the ranges 1103.0–1316.7 m(2) g(−1) and 0.741–0.887 cm(3) g(−1), respectively. The specific capacitance of the optimum sample was ca. 317.5 F g(−1) at 5 mV s(−1) and 272.9 F g(−1) at 1 A g(−1) accompanied by high capacitance retention of 70.49% at a high potential sweep rate of 500 mV s(−1). The electrode also showed good rate capability of 52.1% upon increasing current density from 1 to 50 A g(−1) with exceptional cyclic stability of 99.2% after 10,000 cycles demonstrating the excellent prospects for agricultural waste stuffs, such as lotus seed, in the production of the high performance porous carbon materials required for supercapacitor applications. MDPI 2020-11-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7730822/ /pubmed/33260344 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma13235434 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Shrestha, Ram Lal
Chaudhary, Rashma
Shrestha, Timila
Tamrakar, Birendra Man
Shrestha, Rekha Goswami
Maji, Subrata
Hill, Jonathan P.
Ariga, Katsuhiko
Shrestha, Lok Kumar
Nanoarchitectonics of Lotus Seed Derived Nanoporous Carbon Materials for Supercapacitor Applications
title Nanoarchitectonics of Lotus Seed Derived Nanoporous Carbon Materials for Supercapacitor Applications
title_full Nanoarchitectonics of Lotus Seed Derived Nanoporous Carbon Materials for Supercapacitor Applications
title_fullStr Nanoarchitectonics of Lotus Seed Derived Nanoporous Carbon Materials for Supercapacitor Applications
title_full_unstemmed Nanoarchitectonics of Lotus Seed Derived Nanoporous Carbon Materials for Supercapacitor Applications
title_short Nanoarchitectonics of Lotus Seed Derived Nanoporous Carbon Materials for Supercapacitor Applications
title_sort nanoarchitectonics of lotus seed derived nanoporous carbon materials for supercapacitor applications
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7730822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33260344
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma13235434
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