Biomass-Swelling Assisted Synthesis of Hierarchical Porous Carbon Fibers for Supercapacitor Electrodes

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2016 Oct 26;8(42):28283-28290. doi: 10.1021/acsami.5b11558. Epub 2016 Feb 16.

Abstract

The preparation of porous materials from renewable energy sources is attracting intensive attention due to in terms of the application/economic advantage, and pore structural design is core in the development of efficient supercapacitors or available porous media. In this work, we focused on the transformation of natural biomass, such as cotton, into more stable porous carbonaceous forms for energy storage in practical applications. Biomorphic cotton fibers are pretreated under the effect of NaOH/urea swelling on cellulose and are subsequently used as a biomass carbon source to mold the porous microtubule structure through a certain degree of calcining. As a merit of its favorable structural features, the hierarchical porous carbon fibers exhibit an enhanced electric double layer capacitance (221.7 F g-1 at 0.3 A g-1) and excellent cycling stability (only 4.6% loss was observed after 6000 cycles at 2 A g-1). A detailed investigation displays that biomass-swelling behavior plays a significant role, not only in improving the surface chemical characteristics of biomorphic cotton fibers but also in facilitating the formation of a hierarchical porous carbon fiber structure. In contrast to traditional methods, nickel foams have been used as the collector for supercapacitor that requiring no additional polymeric binders or carbon black as support or conductive materials. Because of the absence of additive materials, we can further enhance capacitance. This remarkable capacitive performance can be due to sufficient void space within the porous microstructure. By effectively increasing the contact area between the carbon surface and the electrolyte, which can reduce the ion diffusion pathway or buffer the volume change during cycling. This approach opens a novel route to produce the abundantly different morphology of porous biomass-based carbon materials and proposes a green alternative method to meet sustainable development needs.

Keywords: binderless; biomass-swelling; carbon fibers; cellulose; hierarchical porous carbon; supercapacitor.