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Biomass‐Derived Nitrogen‐Doped Carbon Nanofiber Network: A Facile Template for Decoration of Ultrathin Nickel‐Cobalt Layered Double Hydroxide Nanosheets as High‐Performance Asymmetric Supercapacitor Electrode
Author(s) -
Lai Feili,
Miao YueE,
Zuo Lizeng,
Lu Hengyi,
Huang Yunpeng,
Liu Tianxi
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.201600412
Subject(s) - supercapacitor , materials science , bacterial cellulose , nanofiber , chemical engineering , carbonization , electrode , cobalt , nickel , carbon nanofiber , capacitance , nanotechnology , composite material , cellulose , carbon nanotube , chemistry , metallurgy , scanning electron microscope , engineering
The development of biomass‐based energy storage devices is an emerging trend to reduce the ever‐increasing consumption of non‐renewable resources. Here, nitrogen‐doped carbonized bacterial cellulose (CBC‐N) nanofibers are obtained by one‐step carbonization of polyaniline coated bacterial cellulose (BC) nanofibers, which not only display excellent capacitive performance as the supercapacitor electrode, but also act as 3D bio‐template for further deposition of ultrathin nickel‐cobalt layered double hydroxide (Ni‐Co LDH) nanosheets. The as‐obtained CBC‐N@LDH composite electrodes exhibit significantly enhanced specific capacitance (1949.5 F g −1 at a discharge current density of 1 A g −1 , based on active materials), high capacitance retention of 54.7% even at a high discharge current density of 10 A g −1 and excellent cycling stability of 74.4% retention after 5000 cycles. Furthermore, asymmetric supercapacitors (ASCs) are constructed using CBC‐N@LDH composites as positive electrode materials and CBC‐N nanofibers as negative electrode materials. By virtue of the intrinsic pseudocapacitive characteristics of CBC‐N@LDH composites and 3D nitrogen‐doped carbon nanofiber networks, the developed ASC exhibits high energy density of 36.3 Wh kg −1 at the power density of 800.2 W kg −1 . Therefore, this work presents a novel protocol for the large‐scale production of biomass‐derived high‐performance electrode materials in practical supercapacitor applications.

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