The inevitable shift toward renewable energy and electrification necessitates earth-abundant sodium reserves for next-generation Na-based energy storage technologies. By coupling the benefits of solid electrolytes over traditional nonaqueous electrolytes due to their safety hazards, solid-state sodium-ion batteries hold huge prospects in the future. This work presents a comprehensively developed solid-state sodium-ion symmetric full cell operating at room temperature enabled through a poly(vinylidene fluoride--hexafluoropropylene) (PVDF-HFP)-based polymer electrolyte and modified NASICON-structured positive and negative electrodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLayered 2D/2D heterointerface composites experience interesting properties that greatly stimulate the recent surge in the attention as robust supercapacitor electrode materials, especially the MXene-based 2D/2D heterointerface for its robust energy storage compatibility. This report unveils a synergistically in situ prepared 2D/2D NbC/TiC MXene (NCTC) heterointerface nanoarchitecture by facile one-pot chemical etching. The methodology adopted enables the interconnected and simultaneous growth of MXenes exposing and retaining their active surfaces for enhanced ion diffusion pathways, charge storage dynamics, microstructural stability, and a noticeable potential window.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 2D/2D layered materials are gaining much-needed attention owing to the unprecedented results in supercapacitors by their robust structural and electrochemical compatibility. Here, a facile scalable synthesis of 2D/2D MXene/boron carbon nitride (BCN) heterostructure through no residue direct pyrolysis is reported. The process allows the in-situ growth of BCN nanosheets unravelling the surfaces of MXene synergistically that provide an interconnected conductive network with wide potential window, augmented proportion of Ti sites at elevated temperature removing terminal groups enabling high pseudocapacitive activity and impressive stability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study presents the orange peel activated carbon (OPAC), derived from biowaste precursor (orange peel) by single step pyrolysis method and its application for the adsorption of chlorophenoxyacetic acid herbicides from the water. The OPAC exhibited the surface area of 592.471 m g, pore volume and pore diameter of 0.
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