1 research outputs found
Hierarchically Uniform 2D Porous Sheet-like NiO/NiCo<sub>2</sub>O<sub>4</sub>: A High-Performance Positrode Material for All-Solid-State Hybrid Pseudocapacitors with Superior Ragone and Cyclic Efficiencies
As electrochemical energy storage
devices with superior Ragone
and cyclic efficiencies are vital for numerous modern-day technologies,
herein, a kinetically controlled crystal growth strategy has been
innovated to design a very uniform 2D porous sheet-like NiO/NiCo2O4 positrode material of very high surface area
(235 m2 g–1) for the fabrication of a
high-performance hybrid pseudocapacitor of all-solid-state architecture.
The electrochemical investigation of NiO/NiCo2O4 in a three-electrode setup demonstrates the physiognomies such as
rich redox reversibility, >95% diffusion-controlled charge storage,
high rate charge storage efficiency, negligible iR drop, insignificant charge transfer, and series resistance of 0.45
and 1.21 Ω, respectively, and typical Warburg response indicative
of facilitated diffusion of the electrolyte ions during the charge
storage process, which illustrates the material’s archetypal
suitability as an excellent positrode material for application in
high-performance pseudocapacitors. The fabricated NiO/NiCo2O4||N-rGO all-solid-state hybrid pseudocapacitor (ASSHPC)
device with PVA-KOH and N-rGO as the solid-gel separator electrolyte
and negatrode material, respectively, demonstrates the physiognomies
such as hybrid (semi-infinite diffusion and surface controlled) charge
storage, imperceptible iR drop even under high applied
current density conditions, superior rate specific capacity/capacitance,
extremely low charge transfer, and series resistance of 0.3 and 1.0
Ω, respectively, very low relaxation time constant of ∼0.69
s, excellent Ragone efficiency (energy densities of 38 and 25 Wh kg–1 at power densities of 2346 and 10,976 W kg–1, respectively), and 98.4% retention in area specific capacity over
12,500 charge–discharge cycles. It is found that the multiple
oxidation states of the Ni and Co ions in NiO/NiCo2O4 and the archetypical bulk porosity in its microstructure
offer physicoelectrochemical compatibility with N-rGO, which facilitates
lowly resisted electrolyte ion diffusion, increased redox-active sites,
and shortened diffusion path length of the electroactive ions during
the charge storage process in the high-performance ASSHPC device.
The optimized approach in the study will boost the advancement of
positrode material systems to develop extremely Ragone and cyclic
efficient pseudocapacitor devices for integrations in prospective
electronic architectures