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Highly Porous Willow Wood-Derived Activated Carbon for High-Performance Supercapacitor Electrodes

174

Citations

42

References

2019

Year

Abstract

In this study, we present willow wood as a new low-cost, renewable, and sustainable biomass source for the production of a highly porous activated carbon for application in energy storage devices. The obtained activated carbon showed favorable features required for excellent electrochemical performance such as high surface area (∼2 800 m<sup>2</sup> g<sup>-1</sup>) and pore volume (1.45 cm<sup>3</sup> g<sup>-1</sup>), with coexistence of micropores and mesopores. This carbon material was tested as an electrode for supercapacitor application and showed a high specific capacitance of 394 F g<sup>-1</sup> at a current density of 1 A g<sup>-1</sup> and good cycling stability, retaining ∼94% capacitance after 5 000 cycles (at a current density of 5 A g<sup>-1</sup>) in 6 M KOH electrolyte. The prepared carbon material also showed an excellent rate performance in a symmetrical two-electrode full cell configuration using 1 M Na<sub>2</sub>SO<sub>4</sub> electrolyte, in a high working voltage of 1.8 V. The maximum energy density and power density of the fabricated symmetric cell reach 23 W h kg<sup>-1</sup> and 10 000 W kg<sup>-1</sup>, respectively. These results demonstrate that willow wood can serve as a low-cost carbon feedstock for production of high-performance electrode material for supercapacitors.

References

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