Publication | Open Access
Renewable biopolymer-derived carbon–nickel oxide nanocomposite as an emerging electrode material for energy storage applications
49
Citations
64
References
2023
Year
Crystal StructureEngineeringElectrode-electrolyte InterfaceHybrid CapacitorChemistryHigh CapacityChemical EngineeringNanoengineeringEnergy Storage DeviceEnergy Storage ApplicationsHybrid MaterialsMaterials ScienceBattery Electrode MaterialsElectrochemical Power SourceAdvanced Electrode MaterialElectrode MaterialEnergy StorageRenewable Biopolymer-derived Carbon–nickelEnergy MaterialElectrochemical Double Layer CapacitorElectrochemistryNanomaterialsBatteriesAnode Materials
The high capacity electrode material design with rapid charging/discharging and long life capability have become critical issue and main concern in recent years. Nickel oxide (NiO) has received much attention in the field of energy storage as a cathode electrode materials owing to its layered structure with large spacing, crystal structure, and high specific surface area. In this study the chitosan derived carbon–nickel oxide ([email protected]) nanocomposite was synthesized from a NiO nanoparticle precursor using a precipitation approach, and chitosan (a renewable biopolymer) was used as a carbon resource. The formation mechanism, structural behavior, and morphological properties were examined using various types of microscopic and spectroscopic characterization techniques. The design material tested further as electrode material in an electrochemical half-cell and full cell symmetric assembly. In three electrode system the [email protected] nanocomposite exhibited satisfactory electrochemical performance with a high specific capacitance around 1011.10 Fg-1 and better cyclic stability 94.20% after 3000 cycles. In two electrode symmetric supercapacitive system the fabricated [email protected] delivered maximum Cs 88.30 Fg-1, stability with higher power density 7.84 Whkg-1 at energy density of 133.05 Wkg-1. The fabricated [email protected] electrode material retain the cyclic stability around 90% after 3500 consecutive charge/discharge cycles.
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