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A common tattoo chemical for energy storage: henna plant-derived naphthoquinone dimer as a green and sustainable cathode material for Li-ion batteries.

Mikhail MiroshnikovKeiko KatoGanguli BabuKizhmuri P DivyaLeela Mohana Reddy AravaPulickel M AjayanGeorge John
Published in: RSC advances (2018)
The burgeoning energy demands of an increasingly eco-conscious population have spurred the need for sustainable energy storage devices, and have called into question the viability of the popular lithium ion battery. A series of natural polyaromatic compounds have previously displayed the capability to bind lithium via polar oxygen-containing functional groups that act as redox centers in potential electrodes. Lawsone, a widely renowned dye molecule extracted from the henna leaf, can be dimerized to bislawsone to yield up to six carbonyl/hydroxyl groups for potential lithium coordination. The facile one-step dimerization and subsequent chemical lithiation of bislawsone minimizes synthetic steps and toxic reagents compared to existing systems. We therefore report lithiated bislawsone as a candidate to advance non-toxic and recyclable green battery materials. Bislawsone based electrodes displayed a specific capacity of up to 130 mA h g -1 at 20 mA g -1 currents, and voltage plateaus at 2.1-2.5 V, which are comparable to modern Li-ion battery cathodes.
Keyphrases
  • ion batteries
  • solid state
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • human health
  • highly efficient
  • ionic liquid
  • plant growth