Issue 5, 2019

Electrode engineering starting from live biomass: a ‘smart’ way to construct smart pregnant hybrids for sustainable charge storage devices

Abstract

Evolving the use of rich/renewable biomass into useful electrodes is never out-of-date for sustained energy storage utilization. Despite the fact that scalable electrode fabrication can be achieved by a general strategy of ‘direct calcination and then combination with extra active components’, making bio-derived electrodes with smart pregnant hybrid architectures in a controlled way still remains challenging. Here, we propose a preferable electrode manufacturing protocol, by initiating the engineering with fresh biomaterials via facile biochemical routes. As a paradigm study, fresh tiny yeasts are chosen as the raw material to build functionalized hybrid electrodes of Fe3O4@yeast-evolved carbon (Fe3O4@YE-C), which can serve as prominent anodes for high-rate charge storage devices. Systematic studies verify that the reaction time plays a key role in forming such integrated hybrid configurations. The optimal synergistic cooperation between the outer YE-C ‘reactor’ and inner Fe3O4 ‘nanoactives’ endows the electrodes with outstanding anodic behaviors, comprising remarkable specific capacity, prolonged cycle lifetime and superb rate capability in either half-cell or full-cell aqueous systems. Our present work confirms the feasibility of engineering electrodes starting from live biomass, thus offering a sustainable and superior route to develop advanced and applicable charge storage devices.

Graphical abstract: Electrode engineering starting from live biomass: a ‘smart’ way to construct smart pregnant hybrids for sustainable charge storage devices

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Research Article
Submitted
12 Jan 2019
Accepted
04 Mar 2019
First published
05 Mar 2019

Mater. Chem. Front., 2019,3, 796-805

Electrode engineering starting from live biomass: a ‘smart’ way to construct smart pregnant hybrids for sustainable charge storage devices

J. Jiang, S. Liu, Y. Liu, T. Meng, L. Ma, H. Zhang, M. Xu, J. Zhu and C. M. Li, Mater. Chem. Front., 2019, 3, 796 DOI: 10.1039/C9QM00019D

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