Abstract

The rising demand for clean energy and environmental sustainability has led to the growing interest in redox-active organic-carbon composite electrodes for high power and long-lasting energy storage, especially for electrochemical capacitors (EC)[1]. Nitrogen containing organic redox active materials such as the conducting polymer polyluminol chemically polymerized (CpLum) on multiwalled carbon nanotubes (CNT) showed increased capacitive charge storage properties in the composite (CpLum-CNT)[2]. With merely a few nm CpLum, the composite electrodes exhibited reversible faradaic redox reactions and stored c.a. 3x higher volumetric charge than that of bare CNT. Predictions using DFT showed π interactions between the polymers and the CNT substrate. These interactions are thought to have stabilized the composite and contributed to the strong electrochemical performance. In addition to CNT substrates, activated carbons (ACs) offer high specific surface areas, diverse pore size distributions and native surface functionalities owing to their sources. Biomass-derived ACs can serve as low cost, sustainable alternative substrates from feedstocks as pinecone and waste tea [3]–[6].In this work, we investigate the effects of different surface chemistry, porosity and graphitization on CNT and porous activated carbon surfaces towards the redox activity of the CpLum-carbon composite. The surface functionalities of interest include hydroxyl and carboxyl groups owing to their known contributions toward surface wettability and pseudocapacitance while being present on naturally derived ACs. Varying porosity and graphitization also offer insight into the effects of differing specific surface areas, pore sizes, wettability, and conductivity on the CpLum-carbon composites. Figure 1 a. shows a schematic of the groups of interest and graphitization to investigate the surface interaction of luminol on CNT and Figure 1 b. shows the redox active behavior of CpLum-CNT. The insights from these studies will be used to engineer the surface of carbons such as CNTs and ACs to improve the interfacial properties for redox active materials.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call