Issue 16, 2022

Renewable spent mushroom compost-derived carbon for solid-state supercapacitors as a sustainable alternative

Abstract

The preparation of an environmentally benign, inexpensive supercapacitor electrode material from waste biomass, achieving useful carbon electrode production, is challenging. The present work aims to find a process for recycling spent mushroom compost into a useful supercapacitor electrode material. High-surface-area activated carbon derived from spent mushroom compost (SMC) is used as a catalyst electrode in a solid-state electrochemical double-layer capacitor (SSEDLC). The SMC is thermally activated at three different temperatures (SMC-700, SMC-800, and SMC-900) to achieve the optimal carbon content and activation temperature for improving electrode performance based on the surface area and pore structure. The SMC-derived nanostructured carbon exhibited a high specific surface area of 690 m2 g−1 in the case of SMC-800 upon activation, which strongly influences the specific and areal capacitance of the fabricated SSEDLC. Interestingly, the use of the prepared PVA/H2SO4 gel electrolyte showed a promising trend, with considerable capacitance retention of up to 90% over 3000 cycles obtained with the material optimized at 800 °C (SMC-800).

Graphical abstract: Renewable spent mushroom compost-derived carbon for solid-state supercapacitors as a sustainable alternative

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Feb 2022
Accepted
17 Mar 2022
First published
23 Mar 2022

New J. Chem., 2022,46, 7433-7441

Renewable spent mushroom compost-derived carbon for solid-state supercapacitors as a sustainable alternative

P. Dhanasekaran, D. R. Kumar, J. Shim and D. Kalpana, New J. Chem., 2022, 46, 7433 DOI: 10.1039/D2NJ00554A

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