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Carbonized Leather Waste: A Review and Conductivity Outlook

Publication at Faculty of Mathematics and Physics |
2023

Abstract

The carbonization of collagen-based leather waste to nitrogen-containing carbon is reviewed with respect to the preparation, characterization of carbonized products, and applications proposed in the literature. The resulting nitrogen-containing carbons with fibrous morphology have been used as adsorbents in water pollution treatment, in electrocatalysis, and especially in electrodes of energy-storage devices, such as supercapacitors and batteries.

Although electrical conductivity has been implicitly exploited in many cases, the quantitative determination of this parameter has been addressed in the literature only marginally. In this report, attention has been newly paid to the determination of conductivity and its dependence on carbonization temperature.

The resulting powders cannot be compressed into pellets for routine conductivity determination. A new method has been used to follow the resistivity of powders as a function of pressure up to 10 MPa.

The conductivity at this pressure increased from 9.4 x 10(-8) S cm(-1) for carbonization at 500 degrees C to 5.3 S cm(-1) at 1000 degrees C. The conductivity of the last sample was comparable with conducting polymers such as polypyrrole.

The carbonized leather thus has the potential to be used in applications requiring electrical conduction.