In recent years, the research of doping heteroatoms in a carbon framework for supercapacitive electrodes has drawn tremendous attention due to the highly active electrochemical performance characteristics of the resulting… Click to show full abstract
In recent years, the research of doping heteroatoms in a carbon framework for supercapacitive electrodes has drawn tremendous attention due to the highly active electrochemical performance characteristics of the resulting materials. Here, we present a method to synthesize highly porous nitrogen-doped carbon nanomaterials derived from a polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) material via a relatively low-temperature simultaneous activation/calcination process. PVP fine powder was mixed with sodium hydroxide as a carbon-activation agent and calcined at a relatively low temperature of 600 °C for one hour under a nitrogen atmosphere. By this process, we obtained a highly porous nitrogen-doped carbon material, possessing a specific surface area of 2400 m2 g−1, which was formed with an amorphous and graphitic structure incorporating ultrathin large sheets. The resultant material displays an excellent specific capacitance (478 F g−1 at 1 A g−1) and a high retention rate of 99.6% after 10 000 cycles at 10 A g−1. The symmetric supercapacitor exhibits high energy densities of 14.2 W h kg−1 and 5.7 W h kg−1 at power densities of 720 W kg−1 and 6035 W kg−1, respectively.
               
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