Shiteng Tan , Ruikun Wang , Jialiang Dong , Kai Zhang , Zhenghui Zhao , Qianqian Yin , Jingwei Liu , Weijie Yang , Jun Cheng
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Nitrogen-doped carbon materials are deemed promising cathode catalysts for microbial fuel cells (MFCs). The challenge lies in reducing costs and enhancing the proportion of electrocatalytically active nitrogenous functional groups. This study proposes a hydrothermal-mediated in-situ doping method to produce nitrogen-doped biochar from aquatic plants. The nitrogen atoms are anchored in the carbon structure during hydrothermal treatment. Subsequent pyrolysis converts the hydrochar into a catalyst with highly catalytically active aromatic ring structure (HC-N+PY). The as-prepared HC-N+PY electrocatalyst demonstrates superior oxygen reduction reaction activity with half-wave potentials of 0.82 V. The MFC with HC-N+PY exhibits excellent performance, with a peak power density of 1444 mW/m2. Theoretical calculations demonstrate that the synergistic effect of graphitic nitrogen and C–O groups at defect sites enhances O2 adsorption and protonation. This work highlights the potential of utilizing nitrogen-doped biochar derived from aquatic plants as an effective catalyst for enhancing the performance of microbial fuel cells.
期刊介绍:
Bioresource Technology publishes original articles, review articles, case studies, and short communications covering the fundamentals, applications, and management of bioresource technology. The journal seeks to advance and disseminate knowledge across various areas related to biomass, biological waste treatment, bioenergy, biotransformations, bioresource systems analysis, and associated conversion or production technologies.
Topics include:
• Biofuels: liquid and gaseous biofuels production, modeling and economics
• Bioprocesses and bioproducts: biocatalysis and fermentations
• Biomass and feedstocks utilization: bioconversion of agro-industrial residues
• Environmental protection: biological waste treatment
• Thermochemical conversion of biomass: combustion, pyrolysis, gasification, catalysis.