Electrosorptive desalination is a very simple and appealing approach to satisfy the increasing demand for drinking water. The large-scale application of this technology calls for the development of easy-to-produce, cheap and highly performing electrode materials and for the identification and tailoring of their most influential properties, as well. Here, biosynthesised bacterial cellulose is used as a carbon precursor for the production of three-dimensional nanostructures endowed with hierarchically porous architecture and different density and type of intrinsic and hetero-atom induced lattice defects. The produced materials exhibit unprecedented desalination capacities for carbon-based electrodes. At an initial concentration of 585 mg L (10 mmol L), they are able to remove from 55 to 79 mg g of salt; as the initial concentration rises to 11.7 g L (200 mmol L), their salt adsorption capacity reaches values ranging between 1.03 and 1.35 g g. The results of the thorough material characterisation by complementary techniques evidence that the relative amount of oxygenated surface functional species enhancing the electrode wettability play a crucial role at lower NaCl concentrations, whereas the availability of active non-sp defect sites for adsorption is mainly influential at higher salt concentrations.

Bacterial-cellulose-derived carbonaceous electrode materials for water desalination via capacitive method: The crucial role of defect sites

Palella A;
2020

Abstract

Electrosorptive desalination is a very simple and appealing approach to satisfy the increasing demand for drinking water. The large-scale application of this technology calls for the development of easy-to-produce, cheap and highly performing electrode materials and for the identification and tailoring of their most influential properties, as well. Here, biosynthesised bacterial cellulose is used as a carbon precursor for the production of three-dimensional nanostructures endowed with hierarchically porous architecture and different density and type of intrinsic and hetero-atom induced lattice defects. The produced materials exhibit unprecedented desalination capacities for carbon-based electrodes. At an initial concentration of 585 mg L (10 mmol L), they are able to remove from 55 to 79 mg g of salt; as the initial concentration rises to 11.7 g L (200 mmol L), their salt adsorption capacity reaches values ranging between 1.03 and 1.35 g g. The results of the thorough material characterisation by complementary techniques evidence that the relative amount of oxygenated surface functional species enhancing the electrode wettability play a crucial role at lower NaCl concentrations, whereas the availability of active non-sp defect sites for adsorption is mainly influential at higher salt concentrations.
2020
Istituto di Tecnologie Avanzate per l'Energia - ITAE
Bacterial cellulose
Raman spectroscopy
Lattice defects
Capacitive deionization
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/381557
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