AUTHOR=Shrestha Lok Kumar , Ariga Katsuhiko TITLE=Nanoarchitectonics for supercapacitor: biomass vs. fullerene JOURNAL=Frontiers in Batteries and Electrochemistry VOLUME=Volume 3 - 2024 YEAR=2024 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/batteries-and-electrochemistry/articles/10.3389/fbael.2024.1422400 DOI=10.3389/fbael.2024.1422400 ISSN=2813-4974 ABSTRACT=The recognition of the importance of nanostructures is mainly due to the development of nanotechnology. For further developments in materials sciences, a concept that integrates nanotechnology with material chemistry to fabricate functional materials has to be proposed. Nanoarchitectonics will carry out this task. In nanoarchitectonics, we architect functional material systems from nano-units (atoms, molecules, nanomaterials). The methodology is not specific to any particular material or application. It covers a wide range. Therefore, nanoarchitectonics can be thought of as the method for everything in materials science. As typical demonstrations for usages of nanoarchitectonics, this review paper presents our work on nanoarchitectonics for supercapacitors. We divide it into two categories with different approaches. The first is the development of carbon materials as supercapacitor electrode materials from biomass. The second category is preparing carbon materials using structures created by supramolecular assembly of fullerenes such as C60 and C70. By presenting examples using opposite starting materials, a complex natural material, and an ultimately simple molecule, we will demonstrate the versatility and breadth of possibilities of this approach. More fundamentally, human development has been accompanied by the progress of materials science. People have obtained materials from the natural world and processed them to create useful tools. In the 20th century, various disciplines related to materials production were established. These are organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry, coordination chemistry, polymer chemistry, supramolecular chemistry, biochemistry, and other material chemistry, which gave mankind knowledge and ways to design and rationally synthesize desired substances. The creation of the discipline has greatly increased the speed at which functional substances can be developed. As functional material systems were developed, one fact became apparent. It is not only the materials themselves but also the material's structure that is extremely important in expressing its function. In particular, control of the nano-level structure is important. Such knowledge is paramount in current research on energy materials development [9,10].