Effect of Sulfonation Level on Lignin/Carbon Composite Electrodes for Large-Scale Organic BatteriesClick to copy article linkArticle link copied!
- Ujwala AilUjwala AilLaboratory of Organic Electronics, Bredgatan 33, 60174, ITN, Linköping University, Norrköping, SwedenMore by Ujwala Ail
- Jaywant PhopaseJaywant PhopaseLaboratory of Organic Electronics, Bredgatan 33, 60174, ITN, Linköping University, Norrköping, SwedenMore by Jaywant Phopase
- Jakob Nilsson
- Zia Ullah KhanZia Ullah KhanLaboratory of Organic Electronics, Bredgatan 33, 60174, ITN, Linköping University, Norrköping, SwedenMore by Zia Ullah Khan
- Olle InganäsOlle InganäsDepartment of Physics, Chemistry and Biology IFM, Linkopings Universitet, Linköping, Sweden 58183More by Olle Inganäs
- Magnus BerggrenMagnus BerggrenLaboratory of Organic Electronics, Bredgatan 33, 60174, ITN, Linköping University, Norrköping, SwedenWallenberg Wood Science Center, Bredgatan 33, 60174, ITN, Linköping University, Norrköping, SwedenMore by Magnus Berggren
- Xavier Crispin*Xavier Crispin*E-mail: [email protected]Laboratory of Organic Electronics, Bredgatan 33, 60174, ITN, Linköping University, Norrköping, SwedenWallenberg Wood Science Center, Bredgatan 33, 60174, ITN, Linköping University, Norrköping, SwedenMore by Xavier Crispin
Abstract
The key figure-of-merit for materials in stationary energy storage applications, such as large-scale energy storage for buildings and grids, is the cost per kilo per electrochemical cycle, rather than the energy density. In this regard, forest-based biopolymers such as lignin, are attractive, as they are abundant on Earth. Here, we explored lignin as an electroactive battery material, able to store two electrons per hydroquinone aromatic ring, with the targeted operation in aqueous electrolytes. The impact of the sulfonation level of lignin on the performance of its composite electrode with carbon was investigated by considering three lignin derivatives: lignosulfonate (LS), partially desulfonated lignosulfonate (DSLS), and fully desulfonated lignin (KL, lignin produced by the kraft process). Partial desulfonation helped in better stability of the composite in aqueous media, simultaneously favoring its water processability. In this way, a route to promote ionic conductivity within the lignin/carbon composite electrodes was developed, facilitating the access to the entire bulk of the volumetric electrodes. Electrochemical performance of DSLS/C showed highly dominant Faradaic contribution (66%) towards the total capacity, indicating an efficient mixed ionic-electronic transport within the lignin-carbon phase, displaying a capacity of 38 mAh/g at 0.25 A/g and 69% of capacity retention after 2200 cycles at a rate of 1 A/g.
Synopsis
Partial sulfonation of lignin promotes ionic conductivity in ball milled carbon nanocomposite and ensures high faradaic storage and good stability.
Introduction
Figure 1
Figure 1. (a) Chemical structure of LS, (b) sketch of the LS-conducting polymer composite, where the electrons can pass through the composite by hopping between adjacent conducting polymer chains (dark blue rectangles) and reach the redox quinone site on the LS (red color lines). The area reachable by the electron is illustrated as light blue color area around the polymer chains, which when overlapping with another polymer chains ensure transport or overlapping with LS ensure its local redox activity. The bottom inset illustrates the redox reaction of lignin. (c) Sketch of the kraft lignin-carbon nanoparticle composite displaying a much lower overlap between the area reachable by the electron and lignin. Only this interfacial volume would display the electrochemical redox process of lignin.
Experimental Section
Procedure for the Desulfonation of LS
Figure 2
Figure 2. (a) Scheme of desulfonation of LS, (b) relative distribution of molecular weight versus logarithmic molecular weight for LS and DSLS in water and eluent.
DS-LS Material Characterization
Gel Permeation Chromatography (GPC)
sample | MW | log Mw | Mn | Mp |
---|---|---|---|---|
LS in water | 12700 | 4.1 | 1070 | 3760 |
LS in eluent | 11400 | 4.1 | 1050 | 3440 |
DSLS water | 23700 | 4.4 | 1410 | 4190 |
DSLS in eluent | 41400 | 4.6 | 1730 | 4570 |
Mw = Weight-averaged molecular weight. Mn = Number-averaged molecular weight. Mp = Peak molecular weight.
Elementary Analysis
sulfur source | LS | DSLS |
---|---|---|
Stot (%) | 7.67 | 9.39 |
SSO4 (%) | 1.95 | 4.60 |
SSO3 (%) | 5.72 | 4.79 |
Preparation of DSLS/Carbon Composite Electrode
Electrochemical Characterization
Results
Characterization of Lignin with Various Sulfonation Levels
Figure 3
Figure 3. SEM images and contact angle of a water drop for (a) LS layer, (b) DSLS layer, and (c) KL layer. The inset picture illustrates the water solution/slurry of different types of lignin samples. Bode plots of LS (d) and DSLS layers (e) at different relative humidity values.
Choice of the Sulfonation Level for the Lignin/Carbon Composite
Figure 4
Figure 4. (a) Composite electrodes dipped in water for 2 h, (b) the UV–vis spectra of the water after 2 h of dipping the composite electrodes, (c–e) the Bode plots at different relative humidity values for KL/C, LS/C, and DSLS/C samples, respectively.
Processing Methods for the Fabrication DSLS-Carbon Electrodes
Figure 5
Figure 5. Panels (a) and (b) are the CV and the galvanostatic discharge plots of the manually mixed DSLS/C composites, (c–e) show the comparison of the manually mixed and ball milled DSLS/C composites in their CV, galvanostatic discharge, and the capacity versus the charging rate.
Figure 6
Figure 6. (a, b) SEM images of the manually mixed and ball milled DSLS/C composites respectively showing the regions analyzed by EDX. (c) The comparison of the carbon mass % and oxygen mass % at different regions on the surface for manually mixed and ball milled DSLS/C composites.
Optimization of the Ball Milled DSLS-Carbon Electrodes
Figure 7
Figure 7. (a) Capacity vs charging rates for composite electrodes with different ratios of carbon and DSLS, (b) the galvanostatic discharge plot at 1 A/g charging rate for DSLS/C (1:1) samples milled for different durations, (c) and (d) show the cyclic voltammetry at 10 mV/s scan rate, the capacity versus charging rate for DS-LS/C (1:1) sample, where the carbon type was varied, (e) galvanostatic charge–discharge stability (cycle) of the DSLS/C electrode of composition of 1:1 with a charging rate of 1 A/g in ambient condition and (f) self-discharge study of the electrode in 0.1 M HClO4 in nitrogen atmosphere.
Discussion
Figure 8
Figure 8. (a) Maximum capacity reported of lignin-based electrodes versus the percentage of capacity retention after 100 cycles for various studies found in the literature: LS/graphite, (14) LS/PAAQ/PEDOT, (9) KL/C, (15,16) KL/CNT, (12) LS/RGO, (11) and LS/PEDOT. (6) Conducting polymers composites are represented by open square symbol, and the composites with other carbon materials are shown with filled square symbol. The data from the present study are shown in blue filled square symbol. (b) CV of the DSLS-C electrode having a 1:1 composition along with 6 wt % binder. The measurement was done in 0.1 M HClO4 at a scan rate of 5 mV/s. (c) Comparison of the total capacity and deconvoluted contributions (non-Faradaic from carbon and Faradaic from lignin with the literature data for the points related to KL/C). (15) (d) The discharge plots at different charging rates for the DSLS-C composite.
Conclusions
Supporting Information
The Supporting Information is available free of charge at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acssuschemeng.0c05397.
Current (at 0 V) versus scan rate, current (at redox potential) versus √ scan rate for manually mixed DSLS/C, EDX elemental mapping of manually mixed and ball milled DSLS/C (PDF)
Terms & Conditions
Most electronic Supporting Information files are available without a subscription to ACS Web Editions. Such files may be downloaded by article for research use (if there is a public use license linked to the relevant article, that license may permit other uses). Permission may be obtained from ACS for other uses through requests via the RightsLink permission system: http://pubs.acs.org/page/copyright/permissions.html.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (proof of concept “Paper battery”, Wallenberg Wood Science Center, a Wallenberg Scholar (O.I.)) and Vinnova (Treesearch, Digital Cellulose Center), Advanced Functional Materials Center at Linköping University. The authors thank Peter Ringstad working at Ligna Energy AB for discussions and project management, Henrik Wallmo working at Valmet AB for discussions and providing the KL samples, Edblad Magnus working at Domsjö-Adityabirla for discussions, chemical analysis, and providing the LS samples.
References
This article references 29 other publications.
- 1Barnes, F., Levine, J., Ed. Large Energy Storage Systems Handbook; CRC Press: Boca Raton, 2011, DOI: 10.1201/b10778 .Google ScholarThere is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 2Liedel, C. Sustainable Battery Materials from Biomass. ChemSusChem 2020, 13, 2110– 2141, DOI: 10.1002/cssc.201903577Google Scholar2Sustainable Battery Materials from BiomassLiedel, ClemensChemSusChem (2020), 13 (9), 2110-2141CODEN: CHEMIZ; ISSN:1864-5631. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)A review. Sustainable sources of energy have been identified as a possible way out of today's oil dependency and are being rapidly developed. In contrast, storage of energy to a large extent still relies on heavy metals in batteries. Esp. when built from biomass-derived orgs., org. batteries are promising alternatives and pave the way towards truly sustainable energy storage. First described in 2008, research on biomass-derived electrodes has been taken up by a multitude of researchers worldwide. Nowadays, in principle, electrodes in batteries could be composed of all kinds of carbonized and noncarbonized biomass: On one hand, all kinds of (waste) biomass may be carbonized and used in anodes of lithium- or sodium-ion batteries, cathodes in metal-sulfur or metal-oxygen batteries, or as conductive additives. On the other hand, a plethora of biomols., such as quinones, flavins, or carboxylates, contain redox-active groups that can be used as redox-active components in electrodes with very little chem. modification. Biomass-based binders can replace toxic halogenated com. binders to enable a truly sustainable future of energy storage devices. Besides the electrodes, electrolytes and separators may also be synthesized from biomass. In this Review, recent research progress in this rapidly emerging field is summarized with a focus on potentially fully biowaste-derived batteries.
- 3National Research Council. The Role of the Chemical Sciences in Finding Alternatives to Critical Resources: A Workshop Summary. The National Academic Press: Washington, DC, 2012. DOI: 10.17226/13366 .Google ScholarThere is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 4Espinoza-Acosta, J. L.; Torres-Chávez, P. I.; Olmedo-Martínez, J. L.; Vega-Rios, A.; Flores-Gallardo, S.; Zaragoza-Contreras, E. A. Lignin in storage and renewable energy applications: A review. J. Energy Chem. 2018, 27, 1422– 1438, DOI: 10.1016/j.jechem.2018.02.015Google ScholarThere is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 5Aro, T.; Fatehi, P. Production and Application of Lignosulfonates and Sulfonated Lignin. ChemSusChem 2017, 10, 1861– 1877, DOI: 10.1002/cssc.201700082Google Scholar5Production and Application of Lignosulfonates and Sulfonated LigninAro, Thomas; Fatehi, PedramChemSusChem (2017), 10 (9), 1861-1877CODEN: CHEMIZ; ISSN:1864-5631. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)Lignin is the largest reservoir of arom. compds. on earth and has great potential to be used in many industrial applications. Alternative methods to produce lignosulfonates from spent sulfite pulping liquors and kraft lignin from black liquor of kraft pulping process are critically reviewed herein. Furthermore, options to increase the sulfonate contents of lignin-based products are outlined and the industrial attractiveness of them is evaluated. This evaluation includes sulfonation and sulfomethylation of lignin. To increase the sulfomethylation efficiency of lignin, various scenarios, including hydrolysis, oxidn., and hydroxymethylation, were compared. The application of sulfonated lignin-based products is assessed and the impact of the properties of these products on the characteristics of their end-use application is critically evaluated. Sulfonated lignin-based products have been used as dispersants in cement admixts. and dye solns. more than other applications, and their mol. wt. and degree of sulfonation were crucial in detg. their efficiency. The use of lignin-based sulfonated products in composites may result in an increase in the hydrophilicity of some composites, but the sulfonated products may need to be desulfonated with an alkali and/or oxygen prior to their use in composites. To be used as a flocculant, sulfonated lignin-based products may need to be cross-linked to increase their mol. wt. The challenges assocd. with the use of lignin-based products in these applications are comprehensively discussed herein.
- 6Ajjan, F. N.; Casado, N.; Rebis, T.; Elfwing, A.; Solin, N.; Mecerreyes, D.; Inganas, O. High performance PEDOT/lignin biopolymer composites for electrochemical supercapacitors. J. Mater. Chem. A 2016, 4, 1838– 1847, DOI: 10.1039/C5TA10096HGoogle Scholar6High performance PEDOT/lignin biopolymer composites for electrochemical supercapacitorsAjjan, F. N.; Casado, N.; Rebis, T.; Elfwing, A.; Solin, N.; Mecerreyes, D.; Inganaes, O.Journal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability (2016), 4 (5), 1838-1847CODEN: JMCAET; ISSN:2050-7496. (Royal Society of Chemistry)Developing sustainable org. electrode materials for energy storage applications is an urgent task. We present a promising candidate based on the use of lignin, the second most abundant biopolymer in nature. This polymer is combined with a conducting polymer, where lignin as a polyanion can behave both as a dopant and surfactant. The synthesis of PEDOT/Lig biocomposites by both oxidative chem. and electrochem. polymn. of EDOT in the presence of lignin sulfonate is presented. The characterization of PEDOT/Lig was performed by UV-Vis-NIR spectroscopy, FTIR IR spectroscopy, thermogravimetric anal., SEM, cyclic voltammetry and galvanostatic charge-discharge. PEDOT doped with lignin doubles the specific capacitance (170.4 F g-1) compared to ref. PEDOT electrodes (80.4 F g-1). The enhanced energy storage performance is a consequence of the addnl. pseudocapacitance generated by the quinone moieties in lignin, which give rise to faradaic reactions. Furthermore PEDOT/Lig is a highly stable biocomposite, retaining about 83% of its electroactivity after 1000 charge/discharge cycles. These results illustrate that the redox doping strategy is a facile and straightforward approach to improve the electroactive performance of PEDOT.
- 7Milczarek, G.; Inganas, O. Renewable Cathode Materials from Biopolymer/Conjugated Polymer Interpenetrating Networks. Science 2012, 335, 1468– 1471, DOI: 10.1126/science.1215159Google Scholar7Renewable Cathode Materials from Biopolymer/Conjugated Polymer Interpenetrating NetworksMilczarek, Grzegorz; Inganaes, OlleScience (Washington, DC, United States) (2012), 335 (6075), 1468-1471CODEN: SCIEAS; ISSN:0036-8075. (American Association for the Advancement of Science)Renewable and cheap materials in electrodes could meet the need for low-cost, intermittent elec. energy storage in a renewable energy system if sufficient charge d. is obtained. Brown liquor, the waste product from paper processing, contains lignin derivs. Polymer cathodes can be prepd. by electrochem. oxidn. of pyrrole to polypyrrole in solns. of lignin derivs. The quinone group in lignin is used for electron and proton storage and exchange during redox cycling, thus combining charge storage in lignin and polypyrrole in an interpenetrating polypyrrole/lignin composite.
- 8Ajjan, F. N.; Jafari, M. J.; Rebis, T.; Ederth, T.; Inganas, O. Spectroelectrochemical investigation of redox states in a polypyrrole/lignin composite electrode material. J. Mater. Chem. A 2015, 3, 12927– 12937, DOI: 10.1039/C5TA00788GGoogle Scholar8Spectroelectrochemical investigation of redox states in a polypyrrole/lignin composite electrode materialAjjan, F. N.; Jafari, M. J.; Rebis, T.; Ederth, T.; Inganaes, O.Journal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability (2015), 3 (24), 12927-12937CODEN: JMCAET; ISSN:2050-7496. (Royal Society of Chemistry)We report spectroelectrochem. studies to investigate the charge storage mechanism of composite polypyrrole/lignin electrodes. Renewable bioorg. electrode materials were produced by electropolymn. of pyrrole in the presence of a water-sol. lignin deriv. acting as a dopant. The resulting composite exhibited enhanced charge storage abilities due to a lignin-based faradaic process, which was expressed after repeated electrochem. redox of the material. The in situ FTIR spectroelectrochem. results show the formation of quinone groups, and reversible oxidn.-redn. of these groups during charge-discharge expts. in the electrode materials. The most significant IR bands include carbonyl absorption near 1705 cm-1, which is attributed to the creation of quinone moieties during oxidn., and absorption at 1045 cm-1 which is due to hydroquinone moieties.
- 9Ajjan, F. N.; Vagin, M.; Rebis, T.; Aguirre, L. E.; Ouyang, L.; Inganas, O. Scalable Asymmetric Supercapacitors Based on Hybrid Organic/Biopolymer Electrodes. Adv. Sustainable Syst. 2017, 1, 1700054, DOI: 10.1002/adsu.201700054Google ScholarThere is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 10Geng, X.; Zhang, Y.; Jiao, L.; Yang, L.; Hamel, J.; Giummarella, N.; Henriksson, G.; Zhang, L.; Zhu, H. Bioinspired Ultrastable Lignin Cathode via Graphene Reconfiguration for Energy Storage. ACS Sustainable Chem. Eng. 2017, 5, 3553– 3561, DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.7b00322Google Scholar10Bioinspired Ultrastable Lignin Cathode via Graphene Reconfiguration for Energy StorageGeng, Xiumei; Zhang, Yelong; Jiao, Li; Yang, Lei; Hamel, Jonathan; Giummarella, Nicola; Henriksson, Gunnar; Zhang, Liming; Zhu, HongliACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering (2017), 5 (4), 3553-3561CODEN: ASCECG; ISSN:2168-0485. (American Chemical Society)Lignin extd. from trees is one of the most abundant biopolymers on Earth. Quinone, a sub-structure in lignin, can be used for energy storage via reversible redox reactions through absorbing and releasing electrons and protons. However, these efforts have encountered hindrances, such as short life cycle, low cycling efficiency, and a high self-discharge rate. All of these issues are related to electrode dissoln. by electrolyte solvents and the insulating nature of lignin. Addressing these crit. challenges, for the first time a reconfigurable and hierarchical graphene cage is used to capture the lignin by mimicking the prey-trapping of venus flytraps. The reconfigurable graphene confines the lignin within the electrode to prevent its dissoln., while acting as a three-dimensional current collector to provide efficient electron transport pathways during the electrochem. reactions. This bioinspired design enables the best cycling performance of lignin reported so far at 88% capacitance retention for 15000 cycles and 211 F g-1 capacitance at a c.d. of 1.0 A g-1. This study demonstrates a feasible and effective strategy for solving the long-term cycling difficulties of lignin-based electrochem. active species, and makes it possible to utilize lignin as an efficient, cheap, and renewable energy storage material.
- 11Kim, S. K.; Kim, Y. K.; Lee, H.; Lee, S. B.; Park, H. S. Superior Pseudocapacitive Behavior of Confined Lignin Nanocrystals for Renewable Energy-Storage Materials. ChemSusChem 2014, 7, 1094– 1101, DOI: 10.1002/cssc.201301061Google Scholar11Superior Pseudocapacitive Behavior of Confined Lignin Nanocrystals for Renewable Energy-Storage MaterialsKim, Sung-Kon; Kim, Yun Ki; Lee, Hyunjoo; Lee, Sang Bok; Park, Ho SeokChemSusChem (2014), 7 (4), 1094-1101CODEN: CHEMIZ; ISSN:1864-5631. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)Strong demand for high-performance energy-storage devices has currently motivated the development of emerging capacitive materials that can resolve their crit. challenge (i.e., low energy d.) and that are renewable and inexpensive energy-storage materials from both environmental and economic viewpoints. Herein, the pseudocapacitive behavior of lignin nanocrystals confined on reduced graphene oxides (RGOs) used for renewable energy-storage materials is demonstrated. The excellent capacitive characteristics of the renewable hybrid electrodes were achieved by synergizing the fast and reversible redox charge transfer of surface-confined quinone and the interplay with electron-conducting RGOs. Accordingly, pseudocapacitors with remarkable rate and cyclic performances (∼96% retention after 3000 cycles) showed a max. capacitance of 432 F g-1, which was close to the theor. capacitance of 482 F g-1 and 6-fold higher than that of RGO (93 F g-1). The chem. strategy delineated herein paves the way to develop advanced renewable electrodes for energy-storage applications and understand the redox chem. of electroactive biomaterials.
- 12Milczarek, G.; Nowicki, M. Carbon nanotubes/kraft lignin composite: Characterization and charge storage properties. Mater. Res. Bull. 2013, 48, 4032– 4038, DOI: 10.1016/j.materresbull.2013.06.022Google Scholar12Carbon nanotubes/kraft lignin composite: Characterization and charge storage propertiesMilczarek, Grzegorz; Nowicki, MarekMaterials Research Bulletin (2013), 48 (10), 4032-4038CODEN: MRBUAC; ISSN:0025-5408. (Elsevier Ltd.)The results of this study demonstrate the spectral, microscopic and electrochem. properties of multi-walled carbon nanotubes (CNTs) surface-functionalized with kraft lignin (KL). XPS and FT-IR spectroscopy show that the biomol. is effectively adsorbed on the surface of CNTs, leading to an increase in oxygen content and the appearance of spectral features characteristic of highly oxidized polyphenolic compds. The presence of KL makes CNTs easily dispersible in org. (DMSO) and aq. (0.1 M ammonia) solns. Microscopic anal. (SEM and AFM) confirms the effective debundling of CNTs and the presence of densely packed globular structures on the surface of individual nanotubes. Deposition of the CNT/KL composite on the surface of a gold electrode facilitates its electrochem. characterization. This reveals that the CNT-supported biomol. exhibits persistent reversible redox behavior attributed to KL-derived quinone moieties. Therefore the reversible redox activity of the lignin adsorbate can be utilized for charge storage, providing more than a 100% increase in the capacitance of KL-modified carbon nanotubes compared with unmodified ones.
- 13Navarro-Suarez, A. M.; Casado, N.; Carretero-Gonźalez, J.; Mecerreyes, D.; Rojo, T. Full-cell quinone/hydroquinone supercapacitors based on partially reduced graphite oxide and lignin/PEDOT electrodes. J. Mater. Chem. A 2017, 5, 7137– 7143, DOI: 10.1039/C7TA00527JGoogle Scholar13Full-cell quinone/hydroquinone supercapacitors based on partially reduced graphite oxide and lignin/PEDOT electrodesNavarro-Suarez, Adriana M.; Casado, Nerea; Carretero-Gonzalez, Javier; Mecerreyes, David; Rojo, TeofiloJournal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability (2017), 5 (15), 7137-7143CODEN: JMCAET; ISSN:2050-7496. (Royal Society of Chemistry)The development of new, scalable and inexpensive materials for low-cost and sustainable energy storage devices is intensely pursued. The combination of redox active biopolymers with electron conducting polymers has shown enhanced charge storage properties. However, their performance has just been investigated at the electrode level. Herein, we move a step further by assembling full-cell supercapacitors based on natural lignin (Lig) and partially reduced graphite oxide (prGrO) electrode materials. Both materials evidenced that quinone/hydroquinone redox moieties are able to store and release charge reversibly. The redox properties of lignin were improved by combining it with poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT). Anal. of the capacitive contributions to the charge storage proved that PEDOT enhanced the lignin's capacitive contribution to the current by 22%. The capacitive contributions were equal to 66% and 75% in Lig/PEDOT blend and prGrO electrodes, resp. We also show for the first time that by distributing equally charges in carbon-biopolymer composite electrodes, a higher capacitance retention, up to 79% after 1000 cycles, is achieved.
- 14Liu, L.; Solin, N.; Inganas, O. Scalable lignin/graphite electrodes formed by mechanochemistry. RSC Adv. 2019, 9, 39758– 39767, DOI: 10.1039/C9RA07507KGoogle Scholar14Scalable lignin/graphite electrodes formed by mechanochemistryLiu, Lianlian; Solin, Niclas; Inganaes, OlleRSC Advances (2019), 9 (68), 39758-39767CODEN: RSCACL; ISSN:2046-2069. (Royal Society of Chemistry)Lignin is a promising candidate for energy storage because of its abundance, wide geog. distribution, and low cost as it is mainly available as a low value product from processing of wood into paper pulp. Lignin contains large amts. of potential quinone groups, which can be oxidized and reduced in a two electron process. This redox reaction makes lignin suitable for charge storage. However, lignin is insulating and therefore conductive materials are necessary in lignin electrodes, for whom the cost of the conductive materials hinders the scalable application. Among the org. conductive materials, graphite is one of the cheapest and is easily acquired from nature. In this work, we combine graphite and lignosulfonate (LS) and fabricate LS/graphite org. electrodes under a solvent-free mech. milling method, without additives. The graphite is sheared into small particles with a size range from 50 nm to 2000 nm. Few-layer graphene is formed during the ball milling process. The LS/graphite hybrid material electrodes with primary stoichiometry of 4/1 (wt./wt.) gives a cond. of 280 S m-1 and discharge capacity of 35 mA h g-1. It is a promising material for the scalable prodn. of LS org. electrodes.
- 15Chaleawlert-umpon, S.; Berthold, T.; Wang, X.; Antonietti, M.; Liedel, C. Kraft Lignin as Electrode Material for Sustainable Electrochemical Energy Storage. Adv. Mater. Interfaces 2017, 4, 1700698, DOI: 10.1002/admi.201700698Google ScholarThere is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 16Chaleawlert-umpon, S.; Liedel, C. More sustainable energy storage: lignin based electrodes with glyoxal crosslinking. J. Mater. Chem. A 2017, 5, 24344– 24352, DOI: 10.1039/C7TA07686JGoogle Scholar16More sustainable energy storage: lignin based electrodes with glyoxal crosslinkingChaleawlert-umpon, S.; Liedel, C.Journal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability (2017), 5 (46), 24344-24352CODEN: JMCAET; ISSN:2050-7496. (Royal Society of Chemistry)Lignin is a promising material to be used in sustainable energy storage devices. It may act as an active component due to hydroquinone motifs or as a binder in electrodes. While usually it is blended or modified with unsustainable chems., crosslinking with glyoxal is investigated as a new route to obtain more benign electrodes. For combining the advantages of high charge (lignin as an active material) and electrode stability (lignin as a binder), a two-step process is chosen in which lignin-carbon composites are first formed and subsequently crosslinking lignin on the carbon. The crosslinking is discussed of the material as well as influences on charge storage. Final electrodes benefit from combined faradaic and non-faradaic charge storage and reach a capacity of 80 mA h g-1 at a discharge rate of 0.2 A g-1.
- 17Che, C.; Vagin, M.; Ail, U.; Gueskine, G.; Phopase, J.; Brooke, R.; Gabrielsson, R.; Jonsson, M. P.; Mak, W. C.; Berggren, M.; Crispin, X. Twinning Lignosulfonate with a Conducting Polymer via Counter-Ion Exchange for Large-Scale Electrical Storage. Adv. Sustainable Syst. 2019, 3, 1900039, DOI: 10.1002/adsu.201900039Google Scholar17Twinning Lignosulfonate with a Conducting Polymer via Counter-Ion Exchange for Large-Scale Electrical StorageChe, Canyan; Vagin, Mikhail; Ail, Ujwala; Gueskine, Viktor; Phopase, Jaywant; Brooke, Robert; Gabrielsson, Roger; Jonsson, Magnus P.; Mak, Wing Cheung; Berggren, Magnus; Crispin, XavierAdvanced Sustainable Systems (2019), 3 (9), 1900039CODEN: ASSDAN; ISSN:2366-7486. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)Lignosulfonate (LS) is a large-scale surplus product of the forest and paper industries, and has primarily been utilized as a low-cost plasticizer in making concrete for the construction industry. LS is an anionic redox-active polyelectrolyte and is a promising candidate to boost the charge capacity of the pos. electrode (positrode) in redox-supercapacitors. Here, the phys.-chem. investigation of how this biopolymer incorporates into the conducting polymer PEDOT matrix, of the positrode, by means of counter-ion exchange is reported. Upon successful incorporation, an optimal access to redox moieties is achieved, which provides a 63% increase of the resulting stored elec. charge by reversible redox interconversion. The effects of pH, ionic strength, and concns., of included components, on the polymer-polymer interactions are optimized to exploit the biopolymer-assocd. redox currents. Further, the explored LS-conducting polymer incorporation strategy, via aq. synthesis, is evaluated in an up-scaling effort toward large-scale elec. energy storage technol. By using an up-scaled prodn. protocol, integration of the biopolymer within the conducting polymer matrix by counter-ion exchange is confirmed and the PEDOT-LS synthesized through optimized strategy reaches an improved charge capacity of 44.6 mAh g-1.
- 18Edberg, J.; Inganas, O.; Engquist, I.; Berggren, M. Boosting the capacity of all-organic paper supercapacitors using wood derivatives. J. Mater. Chem. A 2018, 6, 145– 152, DOI: 10.1039/C7TA06810GGoogle Scholar18Boosting the capacity of all-organic paper supercapacitors using wood derivativesEdberg, Jesper; Inganaes, Olle; Engquist, Isak; Berggren, MagnusJournal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability (2018), 6 (1), 145-152CODEN: JMCAET; ISSN:2050-7496. (Royal Society of Chemistry)Printed and flexible org. electronics is a steadily expanding field of research and applications. One of the most attractive features of this technol. is the possibility of large area and high throughput prodn. to form low-cost electronics on different flexible substrates. With an increasing demand for sustainable energy prodn., low-cost and large vol. technologies to store high-quality energy become equally important. These devices should be environmentally friendly with respect to their entire life cycle. Supercapacitors and batteries based on paper hold great promise for such applications due to the low cost and abundance of cellulose and other forest-derived components. We report a thick-film paper-supercapacitor system based on cellulose nanofibrils, the mixed ion-electron conducting polymer PEDOT:PSS and sulfonated lignin. We demonstrate that the introduction of sulfonated lignin into the cellulose-conducting polymer system increases the specific capacitance from 110 to 230 F g-1 and the areal capacitance from 160 mF cm-2 to 1 F cm-2. By introducing lignosulfonate also into the electrolyte soln., equil., with respect to the concn. of the redox mol., was established between the electrode and the electrolyte, thus allowing us to perform beyond 700 charge/discharge cycles with no obsd. decrease in performance.
- 19Larsson, O.; Said, E.; Berggren, M.; Crispin, X. Insulator Polarization Mechanisms in Polyelectrolyte-Gated Organic Field-Effect Transistors. Adv. Funct. Mater. 2009, 19, 3334– 3341, DOI: 10.1002/adfm.200900588Google Scholar19Insulator Polarization Mechanisms in Polyelectrolyte-Gated Organic Field-Effect TransistorsLarsson, Oscar; Said, Elias; Berggren, Magnus; Crispin, XavierAdvanced Functional Materials (2009), 19 (20), 3334-3341CODEN: AFMDC6; ISSN:1616-301X. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)Electrolyte-gated org. field-effect transistors (OFETs) hold promise for robust printed electronics operating at low voltages. The polarization mechanism of thin solid electrolyte films, the gate insulator in such OFETs, is still unclear and appears to limit the transient current characteristics of the transistors. Here, the polarization response of a thin proton membrane, a poly(styrenesulfonic acid) film, is controlled by varying the relative humidity. The formation of the conducting transistor channel follows the polarization of the polyelectrolyte, such that the drain transient current characteristics vs. the time are rationalized by three different polarization mechanisms: the dipolar relaxation at high frequencies, the ionic relaxation (migration) at intermediate frequencies, and the elec. double-layer formation at the polyelectrolyte interfaces at low frequencies. The elec. double layers of polyelectrolyte capacitors are formed in ∼1 μs at humid conditions and an effective capacitance per area of 10 μF cm-2 is obtained at 1 MHz, thus suggesting that this class of OFETs might operate at up to 1 MHz at 1 V.
- 20Wang, H.; Zhao, D.; Khan, Z. U.; Puzinas, S.; Jonsson, M. P.; Berggren, M.; Crispin, X. Ionic Thermoelectric Figure of Merit for Charging of Supercapacitors. Adv. Electron. Mater. 2017, 3, 1700013, DOI: 10.1002/aelm.201700013Google ScholarThere is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 21Jiao, F.; Edberg, J.; Zhao, D.; Puzinas, S.; Khan, Z. U.; Mäkie, P.; Naderi, A.; Lindström, T.; Odén, M.; Engquist, I.; Berggren, M.; Crispin, X. Nanofibrillated Cellulose-Based Electrolyte and Electrode for Paper-Based Supercapacitors. Adv. Sustainable Syst. 2018, 2, 1700121, DOI: 10.1002/adsu.201700121Google ScholarThere is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 22Kwon, N. H.; Mouck-Makanda, D.; Fromm, K. M. A Review: Carbon Additives in LiMnPO4- and LiCoO2-Based Cathode Composites for Lithium Ion Batteries. Batteries 2018, 4, 50, DOI: 10.3390/batteries4040050Google Scholar22A review: carbon additives in LiMnPO4- and LiCoO2-based cathode composites for lithium ion batteriesKwon, Nam Hee; Mouck-Makanda, Divine; Fromm, Katharina M.Batteries (Basel, Switzerland) (2018), 4 (4), 50CODEN: BATTAT; ISSN:2313-0105. (MDPI AG)A review. Carbon plays a crit. role in improving the electronic cond. of cathodes in lithium ion batteries. Particularly, the characteristics of carbon and its composite with electrode material strongly affect battery properties, governed by electron as well as Li+ ion transport. We have reviewed here various types of carbon materials and org. carbon sources in the prodn. of conductive composites of nano-LiMnPO4 and LiCoO2. Various processes of making these composites with carbon or org. carbon sources and their characterization have been reviewed. Finally, the type and amt. of carbon and the prepn. methods of composites are summarized along with their battery performances and cathode materials. Among the different processes of making a composite, ball milling provided the benefit of dense and homogeneous nanostructured composites, leading to higher tap-d. and thus increasing the volumetric energy densities of cathodes.
- 23Chang, W. J.; Lee, G. H.; Cheon, Y. J.; Kim, J. T.; Lee, S. I.; Kim, J.; Kim, M.; Park, W. I.; Lee, Y. J. Direct Observation of Carboxymethyl Cellulose and Styrene–Butadiene Rubber Binder Distribution in Practical Graphite Anodes for Li-Ion Batteries. ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2019, 11 (44), 41330– 41337, DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b13803Google Scholar23Direct Observation of Carboxymethyl Cellulose and Styrene-Butadiene Rubber Binder Distribution in Practical Graphite Anodes for Li-Ion BatteriesChang, Won Jun; Lee, Gyu Hyeon; Cheon, Yeong Jun; Kim, Jin Tae; Lee, Sang Il; Kim, Jaehyuk; Kim, Myungseop; Park, Won Il; Lee, Yun JungACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (2019), 11 (44), 41330-41337CODEN: AAMICK; ISSN:1944-8244. (American Chemical Society)Despite the important role of CM-cellulose (CMC) and styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR) binders in graphite electrodes for Li-ion batteries, the direct anal. of these binders remains challenging, particularly at very low concns. as in practical graphite anodes. In this paper, the systematic investigation is reported of the physiochem. behavior of the CMC and SBR binders and direct observations of their distributions in practical graphite electrodes. The key to this unprecedented capability is combining the advantages of several analytic techniques, including laser-ablation laser-induced break-down spectroscopy, time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, and a surface and interfacial cutting anal. system. By correlating the vertical distribution with the adsorption behaviors of the CMC, the study reveals that the CMC migration toward the surface during the drying process depends on the degree of cross-linked binder-graphite network generation, which is detd. by the surface property of graphite and CMC materials. The suggested anal. techniques enable the independent tracing of CMC and SBR, disclosing the different vertical distribution of SBR from that of the CMC binder in our practical graphite anodes. This achievement provides addnl. opportunity to analyze the correlation between the binder distribution and mech. properties of the electrodes.
- 24Li, Z.; Ge, Y. Extraction of lignin from sugar cane bagasse and its modification into a high performance dispersant for pesticide formulations. J. Braz. Chem. Soc. 2011, 22, 1866– 1871, DOI: 10.1590/S0103-50532011001000006Google Scholar24Extraction of lignin from sugar cane bagasse and its modification into a high performance dispersant for pesticide formulationsLi, Zhili; Ge, YuanyuanJournal of the Brazilian Chemical Society (2011), 22 (10), 1866-1871CODEN: JOCSET; ISSN:0103-5053. (Sociedade Brasileira de Quimica)In order to effectively utilize a byproduct of non-wood material, lignin was extd. from sugar cane bagasse via acidification of black liquor. The extd. sugar cane bagasse lignin (EBL) was modified by oxidn., hydroxymethylation, and sulfonation into a water-sol. lignosulfonate (EBL-M). It was characterized by IR, UV, GPC and elemental anal. The results showed that the arom. units of EBL-M were kept well and it was effectively sulfonated, that the percentage of S was high as 7.82%. The dispersing efficiency of EBL-M for pesticide formulations was compared with com. dispersants via suspending rate measurement. As expected, EBL-M had the equal optimal dispersing efficiency to kinsperse than other com. lignosulfonates when being used for dimethomorph water dispersible granules. The characterization of mol. wt. and sulfonic group's content of lignosulfonates suggested that the dispersing efficiency increased with higher sulfonic group's content and higher mol. wt. As to being used for tribenuron water dispersible granules, the dispersing efficiency of EBL-M was much close to the com. dispersants.
- 25Heitner, C., Dimmel, D. R, Schmidt, J. A, Ed. Lignin and Lignans: Advances in Chemistry; CRC Press Taylor & Francis Group, 2010, DOI: 10.1201/EBK1574444865 .Google ScholarThere is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 26Fergus, B. J.; Goring, D. A. I. The Distribution of Lignin in Birch Wood as Determined by Ultraviolet Microscopy. Holzforschung 1970, 24, 118, DOI: 10.1515/hfsg.1970.24.4.118Google Scholar26Distribution of lignin in birchwood as determined by ultraviolet microscopyFergus, Brian J.; Goring, David A. I.Holzforschung (1970), 24 (4), 118-24CODEN: HOLZAZ; ISSN:0018-3830.Uv spectroscopy was used to det. the patterns of lignification in birchwood xylem tissues. The lignin contents of the fibers and vessels of white birch were 0.19-0.22 g/g and 0.24-0.28 g/g, resp. The fibers contained 77% of the total lignin in the birch, and the fiber secondary wall contained 77% of the lignin in the fibers and 60% of the lignin in the total wood. The vessel and ray secondary walls contained >81% of the lignin in the xylem.
- 27Ail, U.; Jafari, M. J.; Wang, H.; Ederth, T.; Berggren, M.; Crispin, X. Thermoelectric Properties of Polymeric Mixed Conductors. Adv. Funct. Mater. 2016, 26, 6288– 6296, DOI: 10.1002/adfm.201601106Google Scholar27Thermoelectric Properties of Polymeric Mixed ConductorsAil, Ujwala; Jafari, Mohammad Javad; Wang, Hui; Ederth, Thomas; Berggren, Magnus; Crispin, XavierAdvanced Functional Materials (2016), 26 (34), 6288-6296CODEN: AFMDC6; ISSN:1616-301X. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)The thermoelec. (TE) phenomena are intensively explored by the scientific community due to the rather inefficient way energy resources are used with a large fraction of energy wasted in the form of heat. Among various materials, mixed ion-electron conductors (MIEC) are recently being explored as potential thermoelecs., primarily due to their low thermal cond. The combination of electronic and ionic charge carriers in those inorg. or org. materials leads to complex evolution of the thermovoltage (Voc) with time, temp., and/or humidity. One of the most promising org. thermoelec. materials, poly(3,4-ethyelenedioxythiophene)-polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT-PSS), is an MIEC. A previous study reveals that at high humidity, PEDOT-PSS undergoes an ionic Seebeck effect due to mobile protons. Yet, this phenomenon is not well understood. In this work, the time dependence of the Voc is studied and its behavior from the contribution of both charge carriers (holes and protons) is explained. The presence of a complex reorganization of the charge carriers promoting an internal electrochem. reaction within the polymer film is identified. Interestingly, it is demonstrated that the time dependence behavior of Voc is a way to distinguish between three classes of polymeric materials: electronic conductor, ionic conductor, and mixed ionic-electronic conductor.
- 28Lai, W.; Haile, S. M. Impedance Spectroscopy as a Tool for Chemical and Electrochemical Analysis of Mixed Conductors: A Case Study of Ceria. J. Am. Ceram. Soc. 2005, 88, 2979– 2997, DOI: 10.1111/j.1551-2916.2005.00740.xGoogle Scholar28Impedance spectroscopy as a tool for chemical and electrochemical analysis of mixed conductors: A case study of ceriaLai, Wei; Haile, Sossina M.Journal of the American Ceramic Society (2005), 88 (11), 2979-2997CODEN: JACTAW; ISSN:0002-7820. (Blackwell Publishing, Inc.)The AC impedance response of mixed ionic and electronic conductors (MIECs) is derived from first principles and quant. compared with exptl. data. While the approach is not entirely new, the derivation is provided in a unified and comprehensive manner. Using Sm0.15Ce0.85O1.925-δ with Pt electrodes as a model system, a broad spectrum of elec. and thermodn. properties is extd. solely from the measurement of impedance spectra over wide oxygen partial pressure and temp. ranges. Here, the oxygen partial pressure was varied from air |pO2 = 0.21 atm| to H2 |pO2 = 10-31 atm|, and the temp. was varied from 500° to 650°C. It was essential for this anal. that the material under investigation exhibit, under some conditions, purely ionic behavior and, under others, mixed conducting behavior. The transition from ionic to mixed conducting behavior is recognizable not only from the oxygen partial pressure dependence of the total cond. but also directly from the shape of the impedance spectra. Within the electrolytic regime, the impedance spectra (presented in Nyquist form) take the shape of simple, depressed arcs, whereas within the mixed conducting regime (under reducing conditions), the spectra exhibit the features assocd. with a half tear-drop-shaped element. Parameters derived from quant. fitting of the impedance spectra include the concn. of free electron carriers, the mobilities and activation energies for both ion and electron transport, the electrolytic domain boundary, and the entropy and enthalpy of redn. In addn., the electrochem. behavior of O2 and H2 at the Pt|ceria interface has been characterized from these measurements. Under oxidizing conditions, the data suggest an oxygen electrochem. reaction that is rate limited by the dissocd. adsorption/diffusion of oxygen species on the Pt electrode, similar to Pt|YSZ (yttria-stabilized zirconia). Under reducing conditions, the inverse of the electrode resistivity obeys a p-1/4O2 dependence, with an activation energy that is similar to that measured for the electronic cond. These results suggest that ceria is electrochem. active for hydrogen electro-oxidn. and that the reaction is limited by the rate of removal of electrons from the ceria surface.
- 29Hasan, M. H. M.; Ramli, H.; Ong, S. K.; Manroshan, S. Study on the effect of ball milling time towards the stability of carbon black dispersion and carbon black masterbatch properties. AIP Conference Proceedings 1985, 040014, 2018, DOI: DOI: 10.1063/1.5047191 .Google ScholarThere is no corresponding record for this reference.
Cited By
Smart citations by scite.ai include citation statements extracted from the full text of the citing article. The number of the statements may be higher than the number of citations provided by ACS Publications if one paper cites another multiple times or lower if scite has not yet processed some of the citing articles.
This article is cited by 26 publications.
- Van Chinh Tran, Gabriella Mastantuoni, Jonas Garemark, Christopher H. Dreimol, Xin Wang, Magnus Berggren, Qi Zhou, Renee Kroon, Isak Engquist. Interconnecting EDOT-Based Polymers with Native Lignin toward Enhanced Charge Storage in Conductive Wood. ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 2024, 16
(49)
, 68416-68425. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.4c16298
- Kanmani Moorthi, Sakar Mohan. Developments in Sustainable Green Supercapacitors: A Minireview. Energy & Fuels 2024, 38
(23)
, 22719-22745. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.energyfuels.4c04548
- Eunkyoung Kim, Chen-yu Chen, Jun Wei Phua, Alessandra Napolitano, William E. Bentley, Gregory F. Payne. Operando Spectroelectrochemical Characterization Shows that the Dynamic Flow of Electrons through Melanin Involves Its Redox-State Switching. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C 2023, 127
(40)
, 19979-19994. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.3c05026
- Zhoveta Yhobu, Aisha Siddiqa, Mahesh Padaki, Srinivasa Budagumpi, Nagaraju D. H.. Lignocellulose Biopolymers and Electronically Conducting Polymers: Toward Sustainable Energy Storage Applications. Energy & Fuels 2022, 36
(24)
, 14625-14656. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.energyfuels.2c03101
- Muhammad Shahid Sharif, Zuhra Tayyab, Sajid Rauf, Muhammad Ahsan Masood, MAK Yousaf Shah, Muhammad Tayyab, Abdullah N Alodhayb, Bin Zhu. Redefining electrolyte efficiency: bridging the gap with a systematic samarium–copper co-doping approach for optimized conductivity in advanced semiconductor ionic fuel cell. Materials Futures 2025, 4
(2)
, 025102. https://doi.org/10.1088/2752-5724/adbcc9
- Zhongda Yang, Jian Li, Chenglei Jiang, Bingyue Li, Yanling Guo, Yangwei Wang, Jianing Zhao. Technical and experimental studies on the preparation of lignin/PVA specially shaped carbon electrodes based on frozen DIW technology. Diamond and Related Materials 2025, 155 , 112361. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.diamond.2025.112361
- Mohsen Mohammadi, Saeed Mardi, Jaywant Phopase, Filippa Wentz, Jibin J. Samuel, Ujwala Ail, Magnus Berggren, Reverant Crispin, Klas Tybrandt, Aiman Rahmanudin. Make it flow from solid to liquid: Redox-active electrofluids for intrinsically stretchable batteries. Science Advances 2025, 11
(15)
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adr9010
- Ujwala Ail, Jakob Backe, Zia Ullah Khan, Rui Shu, Jaywant Phopase, Magnus Berggren, Reverant Crispin. Safe and stable Zn-lignin batteries with a biopolymer based hydrogel electrolyte. Journal of Materials Chemistry A 2025, 13
(4)
, 2974-2986. https://doi.org/10.1039/D4TA07213H
- Divyaratan Kumar, Leandro R. Franco, Nicole Abdou, Rui Shu, Anna Martinelli, C. Moyses Araujo, Johannes Gladisch, Viktor Gueskine, Reverant Crispin, Ziyauddin Khan. Water‐in‐Polymer Salt Electrolyte for Long‐Life Rechargeable Aqueous Zinc‐Lignin Battery. ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL MATERIALS 2025, 8
(1)
https://doi.org/10.1002/eem2.12752
- Bingjie Zhou, Yuankai Shao, Weikang Zhu, Shuoyao Yin, Zhenguo Li, Xiaoning Ren, Anqi Dong, Xi Liu, Yatao Liu, Yaodong Hao, Bin Ren, Wei Liu. Synergistic enhancement of pseudocapacitance behavior in supercapacitors through porous carbon and lignosulfonate integration. Journal of Power Sources Advances 2025, 31 , 100165. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.powera.2024.100165
- Aiman Rahmanudin, Mohsen Mohammadi, Patrik Isacsson, Yuyang Li, Laura Seufert, Nara Kim, Saeed Mardi, Isak Engquist, Reverant Crispin, Klas Tybrandt. Stretchable and biodegradable plant-based redox-diffusion batteries. Materials Horizons 2024, 11
(18)
, 4400-4412. https://doi.org/10.1039/D4MH00170B
- Qingshuang Zhao, Ting Xu, Kun Liu, Haishun Du, Meng Zhang, Yaxuan Wang, Leixin Yang, Han Zhang, Xuan Wang, Chuanling Si. Biomass-based functional materials for rechargeable Zn-ion batteries. Energy Storage Materials 2024, 71 , 103605. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ensm.2024.103605
- Md. Merajul Islam. Lignocellulosic biomass-based materials: a promising resource for viable energy storage. Sustainable Energy & Fuels 2024, 8
(9)
, 1823-1871. https://doi.org/10.1039/D4SE00038B
- Hye Min Kwon, Nak Hyun Kim, Suk Joon Hong, Woo Hyeong Sim, Merry Lee, Samick Son, Ki Yoon Bae, Ji Young Kim, Duck Hyun Youn, Yong Sik Kim, Hyung Mo Jeong. Uniform Li-metal growth on renewable lignin with lithiophilic functional groups derived from wood for high-performance Li-metal batteries. Surfaces and Interfaces 2024, 44 , 103643. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.surfin.2023.103643
- Ujwala Ail, Jakob Backe, Magnus Berggren, Xavier Crispin, Jaywant Phopase. Lignin Functionalized with Catechol for Large‐Scale Organic Electrodes in Bio‐Based Batteries. Advanced Energy and Sustainability Research 2023, 4
(12)
https://doi.org/10.1002/aesr.202300146
- Xueru Yang, Yufei Zhang, Minghui Ye, Yongchao Tang, Zhipeng Wen, Xiaoqing Liu, Cheng Chao Li. Renewable lignin and its macromolecule derivatives: an emerging platform toward sustainable electrochemical energy storage. Green Chemistry 2023, 25
(11)
, 4154-4179. https://doi.org/10.1039/D3GC00565H
- Divyaratan Kumar, Ujwala Ail, Zhixing Wu, Emma M. Björk, Magnus Berggren, Viktor Gueskine, Xavier Crispin, Ziyauddin Khan. Zinc salt in “Water‐in‐Polymer Salt Electrolyte” for Zinc‐Lignin Batteries: Electroactivity of the Lignin Cathode. Advanced Sustainable Systems 2023, 7
(4)
https://doi.org/10.1002/adsu.202200433
- Ujwala Ail, Jakob Nilsson, Mattias Jansson, Irina A. Buyanova, Zhixing Wu, Emma Björk, Magnus Berggren, Xavier Crispin. Optimization of Non‐Pyrolyzed Lignin Electrodes for Sustainable Batteries. Advanced Sustainable Systems 2023, 7
(2)
https://doi.org/10.1002/adsu.202200396
- Ruitong Hong, Zile Zhang, Shenrui Pan, Yu Chen, Huan Wang, Wenli Zhang, Xuliang Lin. Construction of PVA-lignosulfonate hydrogels for improved mechanical performances and all-in-one flexible supercapacitors. International Journal of Biological Macromolecules 2023, 225 , 1494-1504. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2022.11.206
- Divyaratan Kumar, Ziyauddin Khan, Ujwala Ail, Jaywant Phopase, Magnus Berggren, Viktor Gueskine, Xavier Crispin. Self‐Discharge in Batteries Based on Lignin and Water‐in‐Polymer Salt Electrolyte. Advanced Energy and Sustainability Research 2022, 3
(10)
https://doi.org/10.1002/aesr.202200073
- Lianlian Liu, Sergej Masich, Emma M. Björk, Niclas Solin, Olle Inganäs. Black Charcoal for Green and Scalable Wooden Electrodes for Supercapabatteries. Energy Technology 2022, 10
(3)
https://doi.org/10.1002/ente.202101072
- Ziyauddin Khan, Ujwala Ail, Fatima Nadia Ajjan, Jaywant Phopase, Zia Ullah Khan, Nara Kim, Jakob Nilsson, Olle Inganäs, Magnus Berggren, Xavier Crispin. Water‐in‐Polymer Salt Electrolyte for Slow Self‐Discharge in Organic Batteries. Advanced Energy and Sustainability Research 2022, 3
(1)
https://doi.org/10.1002/aesr.202100165
- Bingjie Zhou, Yuankai Shao, Zhenguo Li, Bin Ren, Xiaoning Ren, Kaixiang Li, Qingling Liu. Lignosulfonate Boost the Nitrogen-Dopped Carbon Supercapacitor Pseudocapacitance Behavior. SSRN Electronic Journal 2022, 8 https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4201372
- Bingjie Zhou, Zhenguo Li, Wei Liu, Yuankai Shao, Xiaoning Ren, Congjie Lv, Qingling Liu. Hierarchical porous carbon/Kraft lignin composite with significantly improved superior pseudocapacitive behavior. Electrochimica Acta 2021, 398 , 139307. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.electacta.2021.139307
- Lianlian Liu, Niclas Solin, Olle Inganäs. Bio Based Batteries. Advanced Energy Materials 2021, 11
(43)
https://doi.org/10.1002/aenm.202003713
- Weisheng Yang, Yifei Qu, Bingjie Zhou, Chang Li, Liang Jiao, Hongqi Dai. Value-added utilization of lignin-derived aromatic oligomers as renewable charge-storage materials. Industrial Crops and Products 2021, 171 , 113848. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.indcrop.2021.113848
Article Views are the COUNTER-compliant sum of full text article downloads since November 2008 (both PDF and HTML) across all institutions and individuals. These metrics are regularly updated to reflect usage leading up to the last few days.
Citations are the number of other articles citing this article, calculated by Crossref and updated daily. Find more information about Crossref citation counts.
The Altmetric Attention Score is a quantitative measure of the attention that a research article has received online. Clicking on the donut icon will load a page at altmetric.com with additional details about the score and the social media presence for the given article. Find more information on the Altmetric Attention Score and how the score is calculated.
Recommended Articles
Abstract
Figure 1
Figure 1. (a) Chemical structure of LS, (b) sketch of the LS-conducting polymer composite, where the electrons can pass through the composite by hopping between adjacent conducting polymer chains (dark blue rectangles) and reach the redox quinone site on the LS (red color lines). The area reachable by the electron is illustrated as light blue color area around the polymer chains, which when overlapping with another polymer chains ensure transport or overlapping with LS ensure its local redox activity. The bottom inset illustrates the redox reaction of lignin. (c) Sketch of the kraft lignin-carbon nanoparticle composite displaying a much lower overlap between the area reachable by the electron and lignin. Only this interfacial volume would display the electrochemical redox process of lignin.
Figure 2
Figure 2. (a) Scheme of desulfonation of LS, (b) relative distribution of molecular weight versus logarithmic molecular weight for LS and DSLS in water and eluent.
Figure 3
Figure 3. SEM images and contact angle of a water drop for (a) LS layer, (b) DSLS layer, and (c) KL layer. The inset picture illustrates the water solution/slurry of different types of lignin samples. Bode plots of LS (d) and DSLS layers (e) at different relative humidity values.
Figure 4
Figure 4. (a) Composite electrodes dipped in water for 2 h, (b) the UV–vis spectra of the water after 2 h of dipping the composite electrodes, (c–e) the Bode plots at different relative humidity values for KL/C, LS/C, and DSLS/C samples, respectively.
Figure 5
Figure 5. Panels (a) and (b) are the CV and the galvanostatic discharge plots of the manually mixed DSLS/C composites, (c–e) show the comparison of the manually mixed and ball milled DSLS/C composites in their CV, galvanostatic discharge, and the capacity versus the charging rate.
Figure 6
Figure 6. (a, b) SEM images of the manually mixed and ball milled DSLS/C composites respectively showing the regions analyzed by EDX. (c) The comparison of the carbon mass % and oxygen mass % at different regions on the surface for manually mixed and ball milled DSLS/C composites.
Figure 7
Figure 7. (a) Capacity vs charging rates for composite electrodes with different ratios of carbon and DSLS, (b) the galvanostatic discharge plot at 1 A/g charging rate for DSLS/C (1:1) samples milled for different durations, (c) and (d) show the cyclic voltammetry at 10 mV/s scan rate, the capacity versus charging rate for DS-LS/C (1:1) sample, where the carbon type was varied, (e) galvanostatic charge–discharge stability (cycle) of the DSLS/C electrode of composition of 1:1 with a charging rate of 1 A/g in ambient condition and (f) self-discharge study of the electrode in 0.1 M HClO4 in nitrogen atmosphere.
Figure 8
Figure 8. (a) Maximum capacity reported of lignin-based electrodes versus the percentage of capacity retention after 100 cycles for various studies found in the literature: LS/graphite, (14) LS/PAAQ/PEDOT, (9) KL/C, (15,16) KL/CNT, (12) LS/RGO, (11) and LS/PEDOT. (6) Conducting polymers composites are represented by open square symbol, and the composites with other carbon materials are shown with filled square symbol. The data from the present study are shown in blue filled square symbol. (b) CV of the DSLS-C electrode having a 1:1 composition along with 6 wt % binder. The measurement was done in 0.1 M HClO4 at a scan rate of 5 mV/s. (c) Comparison of the total capacity and deconvoluted contributions (non-Faradaic from carbon and Faradaic from lignin with the literature data for the points related to KL/C). (15) (d) The discharge plots at different charging rates for the DSLS-C composite.
References
This article references 29 other publications.
- 1Barnes, F., Levine, J., Ed. Large Energy Storage Systems Handbook; CRC Press: Boca Raton, 2011, DOI: 10.1201/b10778 .There is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 2Liedel, C. Sustainable Battery Materials from Biomass. ChemSusChem 2020, 13, 2110– 2141, DOI: 10.1002/cssc.2019035772Sustainable Battery Materials from BiomassLiedel, ClemensChemSusChem (2020), 13 (9), 2110-2141CODEN: CHEMIZ; ISSN:1864-5631. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)A review. Sustainable sources of energy have been identified as a possible way out of today's oil dependency and are being rapidly developed. In contrast, storage of energy to a large extent still relies on heavy metals in batteries. Esp. when built from biomass-derived orgs., org. batteries are promising alternatives and pave the way towards truly sustainable energy storage. First described in 2008, research on biomass-derived electrodes has been taken up by a multitude of researchers worldwide. Nowadays, in principle, electrodes in batteries could be composed of all kinds of carbonized and noncarbonized biomass: On one hand, all kinds of (waste) biomass may be carbonized and used in anodes of lithium- or sodium-ion batteries, cathodes in metal-sulfur or metal-oxygen batteries, or as conductive additives. On the other hand, a plethora of biomols., such as quinones, flavins, or carboxylates, contain redox-active groups that can be used as redox-active components in electrodes with very little chem. modification. Biomass-based binders can replace toxic halogenated com. binders to enable a truly sustainable future of energy storage devices. Besides the electrodes, electrolytes and separators may also be synthesized from biomass. In this Review, recent research progress in this rapidly emerging field is summarized with a focus on potentially fully biowaste-derived batteries.
- 3National Research Council. The Role of the Chemical Sciences in Finding Alternatives to Critical Resources: A Workshop Summary. The National Academic Press: Washington, DC, 2012. DOI: 10.17226/13366 .There is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 4Espinoza-Acosta, J. L.; Torres-Chávez, P. I.; Olmedo-Martínez, J. L.; Vega-Rios, A.; Flores-Gallardo, S.; Zaragoza-Contreras, E. A. Lignin in storage and renewable energy applications: A review. J. Energy Chem. 2018, 27, 1422– 1438, DOI: 10.1016/j.jechem.2018.02.015There is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 5Aro, T.; Fatehi, P. Production and Application of Lignosulfonates and Sulfonated Lignin. ChemSusChem 2017, 10, 1861– 1877, DOI: 10.1002/cssc.2017000825Production and Application of Lignosulfonates and Sulfonated LigninAro, Thomas; Fatehi, PedramChemSusChem (2017), 10 (9), 1861-1877CODEN: CHEMIZ; ISSN:1864-5631. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)Lignin is the largest reservoir of arom. compds. on earth and has great potential to be used in many industrial applications. Alternative methods to produce lignosulfonates from spent sulfite pulping liquors and kraft lignin from black liquor of kraft pulping process are critically reviewed herein. Furthermore, options to increase the sulfonate contents of lignin-based products are outlined and the industrial attractiveness of them is evaluated. This evaluation includes sulfonation and sulfomethylation of lignin. To increase the sulfomethylation efficiency of lignin, various scenarios, including hydrolysis, oxidn., and hydroxymethylation, were compared. The application of sulfonated lignin-based products is assessed and the impact of the properties of these products on the characteristics of their end-use application is critically evaluated. Sulfonated lignin-based products have been used as dispersants in cement admixts. and dye solns. more than other applications, and their mol. wt. and degree of sulfonation were crucial in detg. their efficiency. The use of lignin-based sulfonated products in composites may result in an increase in the hydrophilicity of some composites, but the sulfonated products may need to be desulfonated with an alkali and/or oxygen prior to their use in composites. To be used as a flocculant, sulfonated lignin-based products may need to be cross-linked to increase their mol. wt. The challenges assocd. with the use of lignin-based products in these applications are comprehensively discussed herein.
- 6Ajjan, F. N.; Casado, N.; Rebis, T.; Elfwing, A.; Solin, N.; Mecerreyes, D.; Inganas, O. High performance PEDOT/lignin biopolymer composites for electrochemical supercapacitors. J. Mater. Chem. A 2016, 4, 1838– 1847, DOI: 10.1039/C5TA10096H6High performance PEDOT/lignin biopolymer composites for electrochemical supercapacitorsAjjan, F. N.; Casado, N.; Rebis, T.; Elfwing, A.; Solin, N.; Mecerreyes, D.; Inganaes, O.Journal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability (2016), 4 (5), 1838-1847CODEN: JMCAET; ISSN:2050-7496. (Royal Society of Chemistry)Developing sustainable org. electrode materials for energy storage applications is an urgent task. We present a promising candidate based on the use of lignin, the second most abundant biopolymer in nature. This polymer is combined with a conducting polymer, where lignin as a polyanion can behave both as a dopant and surfactant. The synthesis of PEDOT/Lig biocomposites by both oxidative chem. and electrochem. polymn. of EDOT in the presence of lignin sulfonate is presented. The characterization of PEDOT/Lig was performed by UV-Vis-NIR spectroscopy, FTIR IR spectroscopy, thermogravimetric anal., SEM, cyclic voltammetry and galvanostatic charge-discharge. PEDOT doped with lignin doubles the specific capacitance (170.4 F g-1) compared to ref. PEDOT electrodes (80.4 F g-1). The enhanced energy storage performance is a consequence of the addnl. pseudocapacitance generated by the quinone moieties in lignin, which give rise to faradaic reactions. Furthermore PEDOT/Lig is a highly stable biocomposite, retaining about 83% of its electroactivity after 1000 charge/discharge cycles. These results illustrate that the redox doping strategy is a facile and straightforward approach to improve the electroactive performance of PEDOT.
- 7Milczarek, G.; Inganas, O. Renewable Cathode Materials from Biopolymer/Conjugated Polymer Interpenetrating Networks. Science 2012, 335, 1468– 1471, DOI: 10.1126/science.12151597Renewable Cathode Materials from Biopolymer/Conjugated Polymer Interpenetrating NetworksMilczarek, Grzegorz; Inganaes, OlleScience (Washington, DC, United States) (2012), 335 (6075), 1468-1471CODEN: SCIEAS; ISSN:0036-8075. (American Association for the Advancement of Science)Renewable and cheap materials in electrodes could meet the need for low-cost, intermittent elec. energy storage in a renewable energy system if sufficient charge d. is obtained. Brown liquor, the waste product from paper processing, contains lignin derivs. Polymer cathodes can be prepd. by electrochem. oxidn. of pyrrole to polypyrrole in solns. of lignin derivs. The quinone group in lignin is used for electron and proton storage and exchange during redox cycling, thus combining charge storage in lignin and polypyrrole in an interpenetrating polypyrrole/lignin composite.
- 8Ajjan, F. N.; Jafari, M. J.; Rebis, T.; Ederth, T.; Inganas, O. Spectroelectrochemical investigation of redox states in a polypyrrole/lignin composite electrode material. J. Mater. Chem. A 2015, 3, 12927– 12937, DOI: 10.1039/C5TA00788G8Spectroelectrochemical investigation of redox states in a polypyrrole/lignin composite electrode materialAjjan, F. N.; Jafari, M. J.; Rebis, T.; Ederth, T.; Inganaes, O.Journal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability (2015), 3 (24), 12927-12937CODEN: JMCAET; ISSN:2050-7496. (Royal Society of Chemistry)We report spectroelectrochem. studies to investigate the charge storage mechanism of composite polypyrrole/lignin electrodes. Renewable bioorg. electrode materials were produced by electropolymn. of pyrrole in the presence of a water-sol. lignin deriv. acting as a dopant. The resulting composite exhibited enhanced charge storage abilities due to a lignin-based faradaic process, which was expressed after repeated electrochem. redox of the material. The in situ FTIR spectroelectrochem. results show the formation of quinone groups, and reversible oxidn.-redn. of these groups during charge-discharge expts. in the electrode materials. The most significant IR bands include carbonyl absorption near 1705 cm-1, which is attributed to the creation of quinone moieties during oxidn., and absorption at 1045 cm-1 which is due to hydroquinone moieties.
- 9Ajjan, F. N.; Vagin, M.; Rebis, T.; Aguirre, L. E.; Ouyang, L.; Inganas, O. Scalable Asymmetric Supercapacitors Based on Hybrid Organic/Biopolymer Electrodes. Adv. Sustainable Syst. 2017, 1, 1700054, DOI: 10.1002/adsu.201700054There is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 10Geng, X.; Zhang, Y.; Jiao, L.; Yang, L.; Hamel, J.; Giummarella, N.; Henriksson, G.; Zhang, L.; Zhu, H. Bioinspired Ultrastable Lignin Cathode via Graphene Reconfiguration for Energy Storage. ACS Sustainable Chem. Eng. 2017, 5, 3553– 3561, DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.7b0032210Bioinspired Ultrastable Lignin Cathode via Graphene Reconfiguration for Energy StorageGeng, Xiumei; Zhang, Yelong; Jiao, Li; Yang, Lei; Hamel, Jonathan; Giummarella, Nicola; Henriksson, Gunnar; Zhang, Liming; Zhu, HongliACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering (2017), 5 (4), 3553-3561CODEN: ASCECG; ISSN:2168-0485. (American Chemical Society)Lignin extd. from trees is one of the most abundant biopolymers on Earth. Quinone, a sub-structure in lignin, can be used for energy storage via reversible redox reactions through absorbing and releasing electrons and protons. However, these efforts have encountered hindrances, such as short life cycle, low cycling efficiency, and a high self-discharge rate. All of these issues are related to electrode dissoln. by electrolyte solvents and the insulating nature of lignin. Addressing these crit. challenges, for the first time a reconfigurable and hierarchical graphene cage is used to capture the lignin by mimicking the prey-trapping of venus flytraps. The reconfigurable graphene confines the lignin within the electrode to prevent its dissoln., while acting as a three-dimensional current collector to provide efficient electron transport pathways during the electrochem. reactions. This bioinspired design enables the best cycling performance of lignin reported so far at 88% capacitance retention for 15000 cycles and 211 F g-1 capacitance at a c.d. of 1.0 A g-1. This study demonstrates a feasible and effective strategy for solving the long-term cycling difficulties of lignin-based electrochem. active species, and makes it possible to utilize lignin as an efficient, cheap, and renewable energy storage material.
- 11Kim, S. K.; Kim, Y. K.; Lee, H.; Lee, S. B.; Park, H. S. Superior Pseudocapacitive Behavior of Confined Lignin Nanocrystals for Renewable Energy-Storage Materials. ChemSusChem 2014, 7, 1094– 1101, DOI: 10.1002/cssc.20130106111Superior Pseudocapacitive Behavior of Confined Lignin Nanocrystals for Renewable Energy-Storage MaterialsKim, Sung-Kon; Kim, Yun Ki; Lee, Hyunjoo; Lee, Sang Bok; Park, Ho SeokChemSusChem (2014), 7 (4), 1094-1101CODEN: CHEMIZ; ISSN:1864-5631. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)Strong demand for high-performance energy-storage devices has currently motivated the development of emerging capacitive materials that can resolve their crit. challenge (i.e., low energy d.) and that are renewable and inexpensive energy-storage materials from both environmental and economic viewpoints. Herein, the pseudocapacitive behavior of lignin nanocrystals confined on reduced graphene oxides (RGOs) used for renewable energy-storage materials is demonstrated. The excellent capacitive characteristics of the renewable hybrid electrodes were achieved by synergizing the fast and reversible redox charge transfer of surface-confined quinone and the interplay with electron-conducting RGOs. Accordingly, pseudocapacitors with remarkable rate and cyclic performances (∼96% retention after 3000 cycles) showed a max. capacitance of 432 F g-1, which was close to the theor. capacitance of 482 F g-1 and 6-fold higher than that of RGO (93 F g-1). The chem. strategy delineated herein paves the way to develop advanced renewable electrodes for energy-storage applications and understand the redox chem. of electroactive biomaterials.
- 12Milczarek, G.; Nowicki, M. Carbon nanotubes/kraft lignin composite: Characterization and charge storage properties. Mater. Res. Bull. 2013, 48, 4032– 4038, DOI: 10.1016/j.materresbull.2013.06.02212Carbon nanotubes/kraft lignin composite: Characterization and charge storage propertiesMilczarek, Grzegorz; Nowicki, MarekMaterials Research Bulletin (2013), 48 (10), 4032-4038CODEN: MRBUAC; ISSN:0025-5408. (Elsevier Ltd.)The results of this study demonstrate the spectral, microscopic and electrochem. properties of multi-walled carbon nanotubes (CNTs) surface-functionalized with kraft lignin (KL). XPS and FT-IR spectroscopy show that the biomol. is effectively adsorbed on the surface of CNTs, leading to an increase in oxygen content and the appearance of spectral features characteristic of highly oxidized polyphenolic compds. The presence of KL makes CNTs easily dispersible in org. (DMSO) and aq. (0.1 M ammonia) solns. Microscopic anal. (SEM and AFM) confirms the effective debundling of CNTs and the presence of densely packed globular structures on the surface of individual nanotubes. Deposition of the CNT/KL composite on the surface of a gold electrode facilitates its electrochem. characterization. This reveals that the CNT-supported biomol. exhibits persistent reversible redox behavior attributed to KL-derived quinone moieties. Therefore the reversible redox activity of the lignin adsorbate can be utilized for charge storage, providing more than a 100% increase in the capacitance of KL-modified carbon nanotubes compared with unmodified ones.
- 13Navarro-Suarez, A. M.; Casado, N.; Carretero-Gonźalez, J.; Mecerreyes, D.; Rojo, T. Full-cell quinone/hydroquinone supercapacitors based on partially reduced graphite oxide and lignin/PEDOT electrodes. J. Mater. Chem. A 2017, 5, 7137– 7143, DOI: 10.1039/C7TA00527J13Full-cell quinone/hydroquinone supercapacitors based on partially reduced graphite oxide and lignin/PEDOT electrodesNavarro-Suarez, Adriana M.; Casado, Nerea; Carretero-Gonzalez, Javier; Mecerreyes, David; Rojo, TeofiloJournal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability (2017), 5 (15), 7137-7143CODEN: JMCAET; ISSN:2050-7496. (Royal Society of Chemistry)The development of new, scalable and inexpensive materials for low-cost and sustainable energy storage devices is intensely pursued. The combination of redox active biopolymers with electron conducting polymers has shown enhanced charge storage properties. However, their performance has just been investigated at the electrode level. Herein, we move a step further by assembling full-cell supercapacitors based on natural lignin (Lig) and partially reduced graphite oxide (prGrO) electrode materials. Both materials evidenced that quinone/hydroquinone redox moieties are able to store and release charge reversibly. The redox properties of lignin were improved by combining it with poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT). Anal. of the capacitive contributions to the charge storage proved that PEDOT enhanced the lignin's capacitive contribution to the current by 22%. The capacitive contributions were equal to 66% and 75% in Lig/PEDOT blend and prGrO electrodes, resp. We also show for the first time that by distributing equally charges in carbon-biopolymer composite electrodes, a higher capacitance retention, up to 79% after 1000 cycles, is achieved.
- 14Liu, L.; Solin, N.; Inganas, O. Scalable lignin/graphite electrodes formed by mechanochemistry. RSC Adv. 2019, 9, 39758– 39767, DOI: 10.1039/C9RA07507K14Scalable lignin/graphite electrodes formed by mechanochemistryLiu, Lianlian; Solin, Niclas; Inganaes, OlleRSC Advances (2019), 9 (68), 39758-39767CODEN: RSCACL; ISSN:2046-2069. (Royal Society of Chemistry)Lignin is a promising candidate for energy storage because of its abundance, wide geog. distribution, and low cost as it is mainly available as a low value product from processing of wood into paper pulp. Lignin contains large amts. of potential quinone groups, which can be oxidized and reduced in a two electron process. This redox reaction makes lignin suitable for charge storage. However, lignin is insulating and therefore conductive materials are necessary in lignin electrodes, for whom the cost of the conductive materials hinders the scalable application. Among the org. conductive materials, graphite is one of the cheapest and is easily acquired from nature. In this work, we combine graphite and lignosulfonate (LS) and fabricate LS/graphite org. electrodes under a solvent-free mech. milling method, without additives. The graphite is sheared into small particles with a size range from 50 nm to 2000 nm. Few-layer graphene is formed during the ball milling process. The LS/graphite hybrid material electrodes with primary stoichiometry of 4/1 (wt./wt.) gives a cond. of 280 S m-1 and discharge capacity of 35 mA h g-1. It is a promising material for the scalable prodn. of LS org. electrodes.
- 15Chaleawlert-umpon, S.; Berthold, T.; Wang, X.; Antonietti, M.; Liedel, C. Kraft Lignin as Electrode Material for Sustainable Electrochemical Energy Storage. Adv. Mater. Interfaces 2017, 4, 1700698, DOI: 10.1002/admi.201700698There is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 16Chaleawlert-umpon, S.; Liedel, C. More sustainable energy storage: lignin based electrodes with glyoxal crosslinking. J. Mater. Chem. A 2017, 5, 24344– 24352, DOI: 10.1039/C7TA07686J16More sustainable energy storage: lignin based electrodes with glyoxal crosslinkingChaleawlert-umpon, S.; Liedel, C.Journal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability (2017), 5 (46), 24344-24352CODEN: JMCAET; ISSN:2050-7496. (Royal Society of Chemistry)Lignin is a promising material to be used in sustainable energy storage devices. It may act as an active component due to hydroquinone motifs or as a binder in electrodes. While usually it is blended or modified with unsustainable chems., crosslinking with glyoxal is investigated as a new route to obtain more benign electrodes. For combining the advantages of high charge (lignin as an active material) and electrode stability (lignin as a binder), a two-step process is chosen in which lignin-carbon composites are first formed and subsequently crosslinking lignin on the carbon. The crosslinking is discussed of the material as well as influences on charge storage. Final electrodes benefit from combined faradaic and non-faradaic charge storage and reach a capacity of 80 mA h g-1 at a discharge rate of 0.2 A g-1.
- 17Che, C.; Vagin, M.; Ail, U.; Gueskine, G.; Phopase, J.; Brooke, R.; Gabrielsson, R.; Jonsson, M. P.; Mak, W. C.; Berggren, M.; Crispin, X. Twinning Lignosulfonate with a Conducting Polymer via Counter-Ion Exchange for Large-Scale Electrical Storage. Adv. Sustainable Syst. 2019, 3, 1900039, DOI: 10.1002/adsu.20190003917Twinning Lignosulfonate with a Conducting Polymer via Counter-Ion Exchange for Large-Scale Electrical StorageChe, Canyan; Vagin, Mikhail; Ail, Ujwala; Gueskine, Viktor; Phopase, Jaywant; Brooke, Robert; Gabrielsson, Roger; Jonsson, Magnus P.; Mak, Wing Cheung; Berggren, Magnus; Crispin, XavierAdvanced Sustainable Systems (2019), 3 (9), 1900039CODEN: ASSDAN; ISSN:2366-7486. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)Lignosulfonate (LS) is a large-scale surplus product of the forest and paper industries, and has primarily been utilized as a low-cost plasticizer in making concrete for the construction industry. LS is an anionic redox-active polyelectrolyte and is a promising candidate to boost the charge capacity of the pos. electrode (positrode) in redox-supercapacitors. Here, the phys.-chem. investigation of how this biopolymer incorporates into the conducting polymer PEDOT matrix, of the positrode, by means of counter-ion exchange is reported. Upon successful incorporation, an optimal access to redox moieties is achieved, which provides a 63% increase of the resulting stored elec. charge by reversible redox interconversion. The effects of pH, ionic strength, and concns., of included components, on the polymer-polymer interactions are optimized to exploit the biopolymer-assocd. redox currents. Further, the explored LS-conducting polymer incorporation strategy, via aq. synthesis, is evaluated in an up-scaling effort toward large-scale elec. energy storage technol. By using an up-scaled prodn. protocol, integration of the biopolymer within the conducting polymer matrix by counter-ion exchange is confirmed and the PEDOT-LS synthesized through optimized strategy reaches an improved charge capacity of 44.6 mAh g-1.
- 18Edberg, J.; Inganas, O.; Engquist, I.; Berggren, M. Boosting the capacity of all-organic paper supercapacitors using wood derivatives. J. Mater. Chem. A 2018, 6, 145– 152, DOI: 10.1039/C7TA06810G18Boosting the capacity of all-organic paper supercapacitors using wood derivativesEdberg, Jesper; Inganaes, Olle; Engquist, Isak; Berggren, MagnusJournal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability (2018), 6 (1), 145-152CODEN: JMCAET; ISSN:2050-7496. (Royal Society of Chemistry)Printed and flexible org. electronics is a steadily expanding field of research and applications. One of the most attractive features of this technol. is the possibility of large area and high throughput prodn. to form low-cost electronics on different flexible substrates. With an increasing demand for sustainable energy prodn., low-cost and large vol. technologies to store high-quality energy become equally important. These devices should be environmentally friendly with respect to their entire life cycle. Supercapacitors and batteries based on paper hold great promise for such applications due to the low cost and abundance of cellulose and other forest-derived components. We report a thick-film paper-supercapacitor system based on cellulose nanofibrils, the mixed ion-electron conducting polymer PEDOT:PSS and sulfonated lignin. We demonstrate that the introduction of sulfonated lignin into the cellulose-conducting polymer system increases the specific capacitance from 110 to 230 F g-1 and the areal capacitance from 160 mF cm-2 to 1 F cm-2. By introducing lignosulfonate also into the electrolyte soln., equil., with respect to the concn. of the redox mol., was established between the electrode and the electrolyte, thus allowing us to perform beyond 700 charge/discharge cycles with no obsd. decrease in performance.
- 19Larsson, O.; Said, E.; Berggren, M.; Crispin, X. Insulator Polarization Mechanisms in Polyelectrolyte-Gated Organic Field-Effect Transistors. Adv. Funct. Mater. 2009, 19, 3334– 3341, DOI: 10.1002/adfm.20090058819Insulator Polarization Mechanisms in Polyelectrolyte-Gated Organic Field-Effect TransistorsLarsson, Oscar; Said, Elias; Berggren, Magnus; Crispin, XavierAdvanced Functional Materials (2009), 19 (20), 3334-3341CODEN: AFMDC6; ISSN:1616-301X. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)Electrolyte-gated org. field-effect transistors (OFETs) hold promise for robust printed electronics operating at low voltages. The polarization mechanism of thin solid electrolyte films, the gate insulator in such OFETs, is still unclear and appears to limit the transient current characteristics of the transistors. Here, the polarization response of a thin proton membrane, a poly(styrenesulfonic acid) film, is controlled by varying the relative humidity. The formation of the conducting transistor channel follows the polarization of the polyelectrolyte, such that the drain transient current characteristics vs. the time are rationalized by three different polarization mechanisms: the dipolar relaxation at high frequencies, the ionic relaxation (migration) at intermediate frequencies, and the elec. double-layer formation at the polyelectrolyte interfaces at low frequencies. The elec. double layers of polyelectrolyte capacitors are formed in ∼1 μs at humid conditions and an effective capacitance per area of 10 μF cm-2 is obtained at 1 MHz, thus suggesting that this class of OFETs might operate at up to 1 MHz at 1 V.
- 20Wang, H.; Zhao, D.; Khan, Z. U.; Puzinas, S.; Jonsson, M. P.; Berggren, M.; Crispin, X. Ionic Thermoelectric Figure of Merit for Charging of Supercapacitors. Adv. Electron. Mater. 2017, 3, 1700013, DOI: 10.1002/aelm.201700013There is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 21Jiao, F.; Edberg, J.; Zhao, D.; Puzinas, S.; Khan, Z. U.; Mäkie, P.; Naderi, A.; Lindström, T.; Odén, M.; Engquist, I.; Berggren, M.; Crispin, X. Nanofibrillated Cellulose-Based Electrolyte and Electrode for Paper-Based Supercapacitors. Adv. Sustainable Syst. 2018, 2, 1700121, DOI: 10.1002/adsu.201700121There is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 22Kwon, N. H.; Mouck-Makanda, D.; Fromm, K. M. A Review: Carbon Additives in LiMnPO4- and LiCoO2-Based Cathode Composites for Lithium Ion Batteries. Batteries 2018, 4, 50, DOI: 10.3390/batteries404005022A review: carbon additives in LiMnPO4- and LiCoO2-based cathode composites for lithium ion batteriesKwon, Nam Hee; Mouck-Makanda, Divine; Fromm, Katharina M.Batteries (Basel, Switzerland) (2018), 4 (4), 50CODEN: BATTAT; ISSN:2313-0105. (MDPI AG)A review. Carbon plays a crit. role in improving the electronic cond. of cathodes in lithium ion batteries. Particularly, the characteristics of carbon and its composite with electrode material strongly affect battery properties, governed by electron as well as Li+ ion transport. We have reviewed here various types of carbon materials and org. carbon sources in the prodn. of conductive composites of nano-LiMnPO4 and LiCoO2. Various processes of making these composites with carbon or org. carbon sources and their characterization have been reviewed. Finally, the type and amt. of carbon and the prepn. methods of composites are summarized along with their battery performances and cathode materials. Among the different processes of making a composite, ball milling provided the benefit of dense and homogeneous nanostructured composites, leading to higher tap-d. and thus increasing the volumetric energy densities of cathodes.
- 23Chang, W. J.; Lee, G. H.; Cheon, Y. J.; Kim, J. T.; Lee, S. I.; Kim, J.; Kim, M.; Park, W. I.; Lee, Y. J. Direct Observation of Carboxymethyl Cellulose and Styrene–Butadiene Rubber Binder Distribution in Practical Graphite Anodes for Li-Ion Batteries. ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2019, 11 (44), 41330– 41337, DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b1380323Direct Observation of Carboxymethyl Cellulose and Styrene-Butadiene Rubber Binder Distribution in Practical Graphite Anodes for Li-Ion BatteriesChang, Won Jun; Lee, Gyu Hyeon; Cheon, Yeong Jun; Kim, Jin Tae; Lee, Sang Il; Kim, Jaehyuk; Kim, Myungseop; Park, Won Il; Lee, Yun JungACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (2019), 11 (44), 41330-41337CODEN: AAMICK; ISSN:1944-8244. (American Chemical Society)Despite the important role of CM-cellulose (CMC) and styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR) binders in graphite electrodes for Li-ion batteries, the direct anal. of these binders remains challenging, particularly at very low concns. as in practical graphite anodes. In this paper, the systematic investigation is reported of the physiochem. behavior of the CMC and SBR binders and direct observations of their distributions in practical graphite electrodes. The key to this unprecedented capability is combining the advantages of several analytic techniques, including laser-ablation laser-induced break-down spectroscopy, time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, and a surface and interfacial cutting anal. system. By correlating the vertical distribution with the adsorption behaviors of the CMC, the study reveals that the CMC migration toward the surface during the drying process depends on the degree of cross-linked binder-graphite network generation, which is detd. by the surface property of graphite and CMC materials. The suggested anal. techniques enable the independent tracing of CMC and SBR, disclosing the different vertical distribution of SBR from that of the CMC binder in our practical graphite anodes. This achievement provides addnl. opportunity to analyze the correlation between the binder distribution and mech. properties of the electrodes.
- 24Li, Z.; Ge, Y. Extraction of lignin from sugar cane bagasse and its modification into a high performance dispersant for pesticide formulations. J. Braz. Chem. Soc. 2011, 22, 1866– 1871, DOI: 10.1590/S0103-5053201100100000624Extraction of lignin from sugar cane bagasse and its modification into a high performance dispersant for pesticide formulationsLi, Zhili; Ge, YuanyuanJournal of the Brazilian Chemical Society (2011), 22 (10), 1866-1871CODEN: JOCSET; ISSN:0103-5053. (Sociedade Brasileira de Quimica)In order to effectively utilize a byproduct of non-wood material, lignin was extd. from sugar cane bagasse via acidification of black liquor. The extd. sugar cane bagasse lignin (EBL) was modified by oxidn., hydroxymethylation, and sulfonation into a water-sol. lignosulfonate (EBL-M). It was characterized by IR, UV, GPC and elemental anal. The results showed that the arom. units of EBL-M were kept well and it was effectively sulfonated, that the percentage of S was high as 7.82%. The dispersing efficiency of EBL-M for pesticide formulations was compared with com. dispersants via suspending rate measurement. As expected, EBL-M had the equal optimal dispersing efficiency to kinsperse than other com. lignosulfonates when being used for dimethomorph water dispersible granules. The characterization of mol. wt. and sulfonic group's content of lignosulfonates suggested that the dispersing efficiency increased with higher sulfonic group's content and higher mol. wt. As to being used for tribenuron water dispersible granules, the dispersing efficiency of EBL-M was much close to the com. dispersants.
- 25Heitner, C., Dimmel, D. R, Schmidt, J. A, Ed. Lignin and Lignans: Advances in Chemistry; CRC Press Taylor & Francis Group, 2010, DOI: 10.1201/EBK1574444865 .There is no corresponding record for this reference.
- 26Fergus, B. J.; Goring, D. A. I. The Distribution of Lignin in Birch Wood as Determined by Ultraviolet Microscopy. Holzforschung 1970, 24, 118, DOI: 10.1515/hfsg.1970.24.4.11826Distribution of lignin in birchwood as determined by ultraviolet microscopyFergus, Brian J.; Goring, David A. I.Holzforschung (1970), 24 (4), 118-24CODEN: HOLZAZ; ISSN:0018-3830.Uv spectroscopy was used to det. the patterns of lignification in birchwood xylem tissues. The lignin contents of the fibers and vessels of white birch were 0.19-0.22 g/g and 0.24-0.28 g/g, resp. The fibers contained 77% of the total lignin in the birch, and the fiber secondary wall contained 77% of the lignin in the fibers and 60% of the lignin in the total wood. The vessel and ray secondary walls contained >81% of the lignin in the xylem.
- 27Ail, U.; Jafari, M. J.; Wang, H.; Ederth, T.; Berggren, M.; Crispin, X. Thermoelectric Properties of Polymeric Mixed Conductors. Adv. Funct. Mater. 2016, 26, 6288– 6296, DOI: 10.1002/adfm.20160110627Thermoelectric Properties of Polymeric Mixed ConductorsAil, Ujwala; Jafari, Mohammad Javad; Wang, Hui; Ederth, Thomas; Berggren, Magnus; Crispin, XavierAdvanced Functional Materials (2016), 26 (34), 6288-6296CODEN: AFMDC6; ISSN:1616-301X. (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA)The thermoelec. (TE) phenomena are intensively explored by the scientific community due to the rather inefficient way energy resources are used with a large fraction of energy wasted in the form of heat. Among various materials, mixed ion-electron conductors (MIEC) are recently being explored as potential thermoelecs., primarily due to their low thermal cond. The combination of electronic and ionic charge carriers in those inorg. or org. materials leads to complex evolution of the thermovoltage (Voc) with time, temp., and/or humidity. One of the most promising org. thermoelec. materials, poly(3,4-ethyelenedioxythiophene)-polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT-PSS), is an MIEC. A previous study reveals that at high humidity, PEDOT-PSS undergoes an ionic Seebeck effect due to mobile protons. Yet, this phenomenon is not well understood. In this work, the time dependence of the Voc is studied and its behavior from the contribution of both charge carriers (holes and protons) is explained. The presence of a complex reorganization of the charge carriers promoting an internal electrochem. reaction within the polymer film is identified. Interestingly, it is demonstrated that the time dependence behavior of Voc is a way to distinguish between three classes of polymeric materials: electronic conductor, ionic conductor, and mixed ionic-electronic conductor.
- 28Lai, W.; Haile, S. M. Impedance Spectroscopy as a Tool for Chemical and Electrochemical Analysis of Mixed Conductors: A Case Study of Ceria. J. Am. Ceram. Soc. 2005, 88, 2979– 2997, DOI: 10.1111/j.1551-2916.2005.00740.x28Impedance spectroscopy as a tool for chemical and electrochemical analysis of mixed conductors: A case study of ceriaLai, Wei; Haile, Sossina M.Journal of the American Ceramic Society (2005), 88 (11), 2979-2997CODEN: JACTAW; ISSN:0002-7820. (Blackwell Publishing, Inc.)The AC impedance response of mixed ionic and electronic conductors (MIECs) is derived from first principles and quant. compared with exptl. data. While the approach is not entirely new, the derivation is provided in a unified and comprehensive manner. Using Sm0.15Ce0.85O1.925-δ with Pt electrodes as a model system, a broad spectrum of elec. and thermodn. properties is extd. solely from the measurement of impedance spectra over wide oxygen partial pressure and temp. ranges. Here, the oxygen partial pressure was varied from air |pO2 = 0.21 atm| to H2 |pO2 = 10-31 atm|, and the temp. was varied from 500° to 650°C. It was essential for this anal. that the material under investigation exhibit, under some conditions, purely ionic behavior and, under others, mixed conducting behavior. The transition from ionic to mixed conducting behavior is recognizable not only from the oxygen partial pressure dependence of the total cond. but also directly from the shape of the impedance spectra. Within the electrolytic regime, the impedance spectra (presented in Nyquist form) take the shape of simple, depressed arcs, whereas within the mixed conducting regime (under reducing conditions), the spectra exhibit the features assocd. with a half tear-drop-shaped element. Parameters derived from quant. fitting of the impedance spectra include the concn. of free electron carriers, the mobilities and activation energies for both ion and electron transport, the electrolytic domain boundary, and the entropy and enthalpy of redn. In addn., the electrochem. behavior of O2 and H2 at the Pt|ceria interface has been characterized from these measurements. Under oxidizing conditions, the data suggest an oxygen electrochem. reaction that is rate limited by the dissocd. adsorption/diffusion of oxygen species on the Pt electrode, similar to Pt|YSZ (yttria-stabilized zirconia). Under reducing conditions, the inverse of the electrode resistivity obeys a p-1/4O2 dependence, with an activation energy that is similar to that measured for the electronic cond. These results suggest that ceria is electrochem. active for hydrogen electro-oxidn. and that the reaction is limited by the rate of removal of electrons from the ceria surface.
- 29Hasan, M. H. M.; Ramli, H.; Ong, S. K.; Manroshan, S. Study on the effect of ball milling time towards the stability of carbon black dispersion and carbon black masterbatch properties. AIP Conference Proceedings 1985, 040014, 2018, DOI: DOI: 10.1063/1.5047191 .There is no corresponding record for this reference.
Supporting Information
Supporting Information
The Supporting Information is available free of charge at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acssuschemeng.0c05397.
Current (at 0 V) versus scan rate, current (at redox potential) versus √ scan rate for manually mixed DSLS/C, EDX elemental mapping of manually mixed and ball milled DSLS/C (PDF)
Terms & Conditions
Most electronic Supporting Information files are available without a subscription to ACS Web Editions. Such files may be downloaded by article for research use (if there is a public use license linked to the relevant article, that license may permit other uses). Permission may be obtained from ACS for other uses through requests via the RightsLink permission system: http://pubs.acs.org/page/copyright/permissions.html.