Heteroatom-doped highly porous carbon from human urine

Nitin Kaduba Chaudhari, Min Young Song, Jong Sung Yu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

128 Scopus citations

Abstract

Human urine, otherwise potentially polluting waste, is an universal unused resource in organic form disposed by the human body. We present for the first time proof of concept of a convenient, perhaps economically beneficial, and innovative template-free route to synthesize highly porous carbon containing heteroatoms such as N, S, Si, and P from human urine waste as a single precursor for carbon and multiple heteroatoms. High porosity is created through removal of inherently-present salt particles in as-prepared â €œ Urine Carbon (URC), and multiple heteroatoms are naturally doped into the carbon, making it unnecessary to employ troublesome expensive pore-generating templates as well as extra costly heteroatom-containing organic precursors. Additionally, isolation of rock salts is an extra bonus of present work. The technique is simple, but successful, offering naturally doped conductive hierarchical porous URC, which leads to superior electrocatalytic ORR activity comparable to state of the art Pt/C catalyst along with much improved durability and methanol tolerance, demonstrating that the URC can be a promising alternative to costly Pt-based electrocatalyst for ORR. The ORR activity can be addressed in terms of heteroatom doping, surface properties and electrical conductivity of the carbon framework.

Original languageEnglish
Article number5221
JournalScientific Reports
Volume4
DOIs
StatePublished - 9 Jun 2014

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work was supported by NRF grant (NRF 2010-0029245) and Global Frontier R&D Program on Centre for Multiscale Energy System (NRF-2011-0031571) funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology. Authors also would like to thank KBSIs at Jeonju, Daejeon, and Pusan for SEM, TEM, and XPS measurements.

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