dc.description.abstract |
Transition metal oxides have been extensively studied for last few years for its vast
potentials in energy storage and conversion applications due to its remarkable
electrochemical properties, low cost and environmental friendliness. In this direction,
ternary nickel cobaltite (NiCo2O4) nanocrystals have become a promising energy
storage materials for supercapacitor application due to its prolific electroactive sites and
higher electrical conductivity compared to the corresponding binary metal oxides. In the
present project work, a simple and generally applicable strategy was developed for the
efficient synthesis of nanostructured nickel cobaltite of varying morphologies simply by
changing metal to urea ratio. In this direction, sustained and dedicated research efforts
were devoted with an aim to achieve binderless hierarchical nanostructures directly on
the nickel foam substrate. Cyclic voltammetry and galvanostatic charge-discharge
measurements indicated an extremely high areal capacitance of 4349 mF/cm2 for nickel
cobalt oxide nanowires compared to other morphologies such as nanoneedles (2100
mF/cm2), nanosheets with wires (2445 mF/cm2) and platelets (968 mF/cm2). Nickel
cobaltite nanowire electrode demonstrated extended cyclability at 4 mA/cm2 current
density with more than 90% capacity retention at the end of 13000 cycles. To
understand the intrinsic charge injection capability of different morphologies, the
capacitance values are normalized with respect to electrochemically accessible area.
The resulting true area normalized charge injection capability is more than doubled in
nickel cobalt oxide nanowires compared to other morphologies. This indicates the
exposure of more electroactive cationic sites at nickel cobalt oxide nanowire
electrode/electrolyte interface towards tuning the interfacial charge storage mechanism.
Investigation of supercapacitive failure mechanism by leakage current and selfdischarge
rate suggest the most probable failure pathway in nanowire morpho |
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