High-performance supercapacitor energy storage using a carbon material derived from lignin by bacterial activation before carbonization

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A(2019)

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Abstract
The conversion of low-cost renewable lignin could enable the economic fabrication of carbon materials for energy storage devices. However, the traditional activation methods for the production of a lignin-derived porous carbon with a large specific surface area are complex and expensive, and some activators can cause pollution. In this paper, we propose a novel green bacterial activation method for the synthesis of a carbon material with a large surface area of up to 1831 m(2) g(-1) and abundant micropores and mesopores through a conventional carbonization procedure with a simple bacterial culture process. The transformation of the lignin structure by the bacteria optimizes the pore structure of the derived carbon and promotes graphitization. Consequently, as an electrode in a supercapacitor, the obtained material exhibits a very high specific capacitance (428 F g(-1) at 1 A g(-1)), high cycling stability (capacitance retention of 96.7% after 10 000 cycles at 5 A g(-1)), and superior rate performance in an aqueous electrolyte. In addition, the symmetric supercapacitor based on the bacteria-activated lignin-derived carbon exhibits a superior energy density of 66.18 W h kg(-1) at 312 W kg(-1) in an ionic liquid electrolyte system. These excellent features demonstrate the large potential of the developed material for applications in high-performance supercapacitors. Furthermore, the proposed bacteria-activation method can guide a novel biomodification for material syntheses.
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Key words
energy storage,carbonization,lignin,high-performance
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