TY - JOUR
T1 - Electrochemical behavior of V/Ce co-doped carbon shell-coated NiO nanocomposite for alkaline OER and supercapacitor applications
AU - Munawar, Tauseef
AU - Bashir, Ambreen
AU - Sardar, Sonia
AU - Nadeem, Muhammad Shahid
AU - Mukhtar, Faisal
AU - Manzoor, Sumaira
AU - Ashiq, Muhammad Naeem
AU - Khan, Shoukat Alim
AU - Koc, Muammer
AU - Iqbal, Faisal
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/1/15
Y1 - 2024/1/15
N2 - Developing highly efficient, versatile, durable, and non-precious electrode materials for sustainable electrochemical energy storage and conversion technologies is still a long-term challenge in the energy sector for researchers. Herein, we developed a sustainable and bifunctional electrode, based on V/Ce co-doped NiO coated with carbon grown on Ni foam substrate through a simple and cost-effective sol-gel method. OER activity and supercapacitance characteristics have been validated by coupling contact and morphological porous features (unique core-shell) and also demonstrated satisfying electronic structural attributes for grown material. The formation of defective lattice and oxygen vacancies in NiO by co-doping along with varying oxidation states of V, Ce, and Ni was confirmed by XPS. The modified material as a supercapacitor electrode, manifested superior specific capacitance of 1719 F g- 1 at 2 A g- 1 current density and outstanding cycling stability performance with 98.21 % retention after 5000th cycles. This highly efficient cycling is due to abundant redox states and surface redox functionalities of carbon, providing an easy pathway to transfer ions. The redox behavior of the composite catalyst also contributes toward high conductivity and the electrochemically active surface area thus showed a small Tafel slope of 35.4 mV dec- 1. The current density of 10 mA cm- 2 showed a low overpotential of 238 mV. In a practical system, it also revealed significant stability for OER over 100 h of continuous electrolysis, tested by chronoamperometry. The influence of co-doping and carbon support highlights the remarkable advantages of electrochemical performance and enriches its application prospect for efficient electrolysis and storage technology.
AB - Developing highly efficient, versatile, durable, and non-precious electrode materials for sustainable electrochemical energy storage and conversion technologies is still a long-term challenge in the energy sector for researchers. Herein, we developed a sustainable and bifunctional electrode, based on V/Ce co-doped NiO coated with carbon grown on Ni foam substrate through a simple and cost-effective sol-gel method. OER activity and supercapacitance characteristics have been validated by coupling contact and morphological porous features (unique core-shell) and also demonstrated satisfying electronic structural attributes for grown material. The formation of defective lattice and oxygen vacancies in NiO by co-doping along with varying oxidation states of V, Ce, and Ni was confirmed by XPS. The modified material as a supercapacitor electrode, manifested superior specific capacitance of 1719 F g- 1 at 2 A g- 1 current density and outstanding cycling stability performance with 98.21 % retention after 5000th cycles. This highly efficient cycling is due to abundant redox states and surface redox functionalities of carbon, providing an easy pathway to transfer ions. The redox behavior of the composite catalyst also contributes toward high conductivity and the electrochemically active surface area thus showed a small Tafel slope of 35.4 mV dec- 1. The current density of 10 mA cm- 2 showed a low overpotential of 238 mV. In a practical system, it also revealed significant stability for OER over 100 h of continuous electrolysis, tested by chronoamperometry. The influence of co-doping and carbon support highlights the remarkable advantages of electrochemical performance and enriches its application prospect for efficient electrolysis and storage technology.
KW - Carbon coated nanoparticles
KW - Energy storage/conversion
KW - Redox-active sites
KW - Supercapacitor
KW - Water splitting
UR - https://www.webofscience.com/api/gateway?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=hbku_researchportal&SrcAuth=WosAPI&KeyUT=WOS:001147627600001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=WOS_CPL
U2 - 10.1016/j.est.2023.109556
DO - 10.1016/j.est.2023.109556
M3 - Article
SN - 2352-152X
VL - 76
JO - Journal of Energy Storage
JF - Journal of Energy Storage
M1 - 109556
ER -