Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7851100 | Carbon | 2015 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Highly porous materials with a bimodal pore size distribution in the micro-mesopore range have been produced from biomass by adding melamine to the hydrochar/KOH mixture used in the activation process. These carbons are characterized by BET surface areas in excess of â¼3300 m2 gâ1 and a porosity equally distributed between micropores and mesopores. The use of melamine in the synthesis process not only extends the pore size distribution into the mesopore region, but leads to the incorporation of a certain amount of nitrogen atoms into the carbon framework. These materials combine high ion adsorption capacities (micropores) and enhanced ion-transport kinetics (mesopores) leading to an outstanding capacitive performance in ionic liquid-based supercapacitors. Thus, they have specific capacitances >160 F gâ1 at 1 A gâ1 and >140 F gâ1 at 60 A gâ1 in both pure ionic liquid and in acetonitrile-diluted ionic liquid, enabling these materials to store up to a maximum of ca. 60 W h kgâ1 in both kinds of electrolytes and deliver ca. 20 W h kgâ1 at â¼42 kW kgâ1 (discharge time ca. 2 s) in pure ionic liquid and â¼25-30 W h kgâ1 at â¼97-100 kW kgâ1 (discharge time â¼1 s) in acetonitrile-diluted ionic liquid.
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Energy (General)
Authors
Antonio B. Fuertes, Marta Sevilla,