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      Sustainable design of high-performance multifunctional carbon electrodes by one-step laser carbonization for supercapacitors and dopamine sensors†

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      a , a , b , a , , a ,
      Nanoscale
      The Royal Society of Chemistry

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          Abstract

          Laser carbonization is a rapid method to produce functional carbon materials for electronic devices, but many typical carbon precursors are not sustainable and/or require extensive processing for electrochemical applications. Here, a sustainable concept to fabricate laser patterned carbon (LP-C) electrodes from biomass-derived sodium lignosulfonate, an abundant waste product from the paper industry is presented. By introducing an adhesive polymer interlayer between the sodium lignosulfonate and a graphite foil current collector, stable, abrasion-resistant LP-C electrodes can be fabricated in a single laser irradiation step. The electrode properties can be systematically tuned by controlling the laser processing parameters. The optimized LP-C electrodes demonstrate a promising performance in supercapacitors and electrochemical dopamine biosensors. They exhibit high areal capacitances of 38.9 mF cm −2 in 1 M H 2SO 4 and high energy and power densities of 4.3 μW h cm −2 and 16 mW cm −2 in 17 M NaClO 4, showing the best performance among biomass-derived LP-C materials reported so far. After 20 000 charge/discharge cycles, they retain a high capacitance of 81%. Dopamine was linearly detected in the range of 0.1 to 20 μM with an extrapolated limit of detection of 0.5 μM (S/N = 3) and high sensitivity (13.38 μA μM −1 cm −2), demonstrating better performance than previously reported biomass-derived LP-C dopamine sensors.

          Abstract

          Flexible and sustainable fabrication of laser patterned carbon electrodes with high performance using biowaste as a carbon source is presented.

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          Safe and Sustainable by Design chemicals and materials Review of safety and sustainability dimensions, aspects, methods, indicators, and tools

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            Mapping study for the development of sustainable-by-design criteria

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              Nanoscale
              Nanoscale
              NR
              NANOHL
              Nanoscale
              The Royal Society of Chemistry
              2040-3364
              2040-3372
              9 April 2024
              2 May 2024
              9 April 2024
              : 16
              : 17
              : 8627-8638
              Affiliations
              [a ] Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces Am Mühlenberg 1 14476 Potsdam Germany felix.loeffler@ 123456mpikg.mpg.de volker.strauss@ 123456mpikg.mpg.de
              [b ] Institute for Applied Materials (IAM) and Karlsruhe Nano Micro Facility (KNMFi), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) Hermann-von-Helmholtz-Platz 1 76344 Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen Germany
              Author information
              https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8227-2522
              Article
              d4nr00588k
              10.1039/d4nr00588k
              11064777
              38606506
              e3aa16ea-acab-43eb-a56f-1569d33949fb
              This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry
              History
              : 8 February 2024
              : 8 April 2024
              Page count
              Pages: 12
              Funding
              Funded by: H2020 European Research Council, doi 10.13039/100010663;
              Award ID: MoMa-STOR (951513)
              Funded by: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, doi 10.13039/501100004189;
              Award ID: Unassigned
              Funded by: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung, doi 10.13039/501100002347;
              Award ID: 13XP5050A
              Categories
              Chemistry
              Custom metadata
              Paginated Article

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