Nitrogen (N) doping of porous carbon materials is an effective strategy for enhancing the electrochemical performance of electrode materials. Herein, we report on ex-situ (post) nitrogen-doped porous carbons prepared using a biomass waste, peanut shell (PS) as a carbon source and melamine as the nitrogen source. The synthesis method involved a two-step mechanism, initial chemical activation of the PS using KOH and post N-doping of the activated carbon. The effect of the activating agent/precursor ratio and the ex-situ N-doping on the structural, textural, electrochemical properties of the porous carbons was studied. The ex-situ N-doped porous carbon with an optimum amount of KOH to PS exhibited the best capacitance performance with a specific surface area (SSA) of 1442 m g and an enriched nitrogen content (3.2 at %). The fabricated symmetric device exhibited a 251.2 F g specific capacitance per electrode at a gravimetric current of 1 A g in aqueous electrolyte (2.5 M KNO) at a wide cell voltage of 2.0 V. A specific energy of 35 Wh kg with a corresponding specific power of 1 kW kg at 1 A g was delivered with the device still retaining up to 22 Wh kg and a 20 kW kg specific power even at 20 A g. Moreover, long term device stability was exhibited with an 83.2% capacity retention over 20 000 charge/discharge cycles and also a good rate capability after 180 h of floating at 5 A g. This great performance of the symmetric supercapacitor can be correlated to the surface porosity and post nitrogen-doping effect which increased the electrochemically-active sites resulting in a remarkable charge storage capability.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2020.02.061 | DOI Listing |
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