Kudzu root residue is an excellent biomass carbon material that can be transformed into porous carbon through a simple two-step process of "pre-carbonization" followed by KOH activation. The structure of carbonized and activated kudzu root residue material was characterized through various techniques such as SEM, XRD, N2 adsorption-desorption, XPS and Raman spectroscopy. Electrochemical measurement revealed that K-CKR exhibited outstanding electrochemical performance, attributed to its large specific surface area, significant pore volume, and microporous-mesoporous structure. When K-CKR was used to modify a glassy carbon electrode (GCE) for constructing an electrochemical sensor to detect ascorbic acid (AA), it demonstrated remarkable electrochemical sensing capabilities. This included a wide linear detection range (50-1620 mu M), higher sensitivity, a low detection limit (0.83 mu M, S/N=3), excellent stability and interference resistance. These experimental results clearly indicate that K-CKR is a highly promising electrode material for the development of novel electrochemical sensors. Kudzu root residue is transformed into high-performance porous carbon (K-CKR) through a simple pre-carbonization and KOH activation process. Characterized by SEM, XRD, N2 adsorption-desorption, XPS, and Raman spectroscopy, K-CKR exhibits a large specific surface area and a microporous-mesoporous structure. When applied to modify a glassy carbon electrode, it shows exceptional electrochemical sensing capabilities for ascorbic acid, with a wide linear detection range, high sensitivity, low detection limit, excellent stability and interference resistance, making it a promising electrode material for novel electrochemical sensors. image