Hierarchical Porous Carbon Arising from Metal–Organic Framework-Encapsulated Bacteria and Its Energy Storage Potential

ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces(2020)

Cited 32|Views9
No score
Abstract
Hierarchical porous carbons (HPCs) hold great promise in energy-related applications owing to their excellent chemical stability and well-developed porous structures. Attention has been drawn toward developing new synthetic strategies and precursor materials that permit greater control over composition, size, morphology, and pore structure. There is a growing trend of employing metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as HPC precursors as their highly customizable characteristics favor new HPC syntheses. In this article, we report a biomimetically grown bacterial-templated MOF synthesis where the bacteria not only facilitate the formation of MOF nanocrystals but also provide morphology and porosity control. The resultant HPCs show improved electrochemical capacity behavior compared to pristine MOF-derived HPCs. Considering the broad availability of bacteria and ease of their production, in addition to significantly improved MOF growth efficiency on bacterial templates, we believe that the bacterial-templated MOF is a promising strategy to produce a new generation of HPCs.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined