Back to Search Start Over

Biochar from olive tree twigs and spent malt rootlets as electrodes in Zn-air batteries.

Authors :
Kottis, Theodoros
Soursos, Nikolaos
Govatsi, Katerina
Sygellou, Lamprini
Vakros, John
Manariotis, Ioannis D.
Mantzavinos, Dionissios
Lianos, Panagiotis
Source :
Journal of Colloid & Interface Science. Jul2024, Vol. 665, p10-18. 9p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

for the manuscript for the manuscript JCIS-24–2223 "Biochar from olive tree twigs and spent malt rootlets as electrodes in Zn-air batteries", by Kottis et al. [Display omitted] Biochars, i.e. porous carbons obtained by pyrolysis of biomass, can act as electrocatalysts for oxygen evolution and oxygen reduction reaction. In the present work, two biochars have been prepared by using materials of completely different biomass origin: olive-tree twigs and spent malt rootlets (brewery wastes). Both biomass species were subjected to pyrolysis under limited oxygen supply and then they were activated by mixing with KOH and pyrolysis again. The obtained biochars were characterized by several techniques in order to determine their structural characteristics and the composition of their active components. Despite their different origin, the two biochars demonstrated similar structural and compositional characteristics thus highlighting the importance of the pyrolysis and activation procedure. Both biochars were used as electrocatalysts in the operation of rechargeable Zn-air batteries, where they also demonstrated similar electrocatalytic capacities with only a small advantage gained by olive-tree-twigs biochar. Compared to bare nanoparticulate carbon (carbon black), both biochars demonstrated a marked advantage towards oxygen evolution reaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219797
Volume :
665
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Colloid & Interface Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176546068
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2024.03.114