Published January 1, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Fabrication of mesoporous nickel pyrophosphate electrodes and their transformation to nickel hydroxide with decent capacitance in alkaline media

  • 1. Bilkent Univ, Dept Chem, TR-06800 Ankara, Turkiye

Description

The development of high-energy-density electrodes is paramount for the advancement of renewable and clean energy storage materials. In this study, we have devised a synthetic approach to fabricate mesoporous Ni2P2O7 (m-NiPP) electrodes with a decent charge capacity. The method involves the formation of a liquid crystalline mesophase from an aqueous solution containing nickel nitrate hexahydrate salt (Ni(ii)), pyrophosphoric acid (PPA), and a non-ionic surfactant (P123). The mesophase solidifies through the polymerization of Ni(ii) ions and PPA, ultimately forming a mesostructured Ni2HxP2O7(NO3)x center dot nH2O semi-solid, which can be subsequently calcined to yield mesoporous Ni2P2O7 (m-NiPP). The gelation and polymerization process can be monitored using gravimetric, ATR-FTIR, XRD, and POM techniques as water evaporates during the transformation. The results reveal that the reaction between the Ni(ii) ion and PPA initiates in the solution phase, continues in the gel phase, and concludes upon gentle heating. The same clear aqueous solution can be coated onto a substrate, such as FTO or graphite rods, and then calcined at various temperatures to produce the m-NiPP electrodes, composed of spherical mesoporous NiPP particles. These electrodes remain amorphous over a wide temperature range, but crystallize at approximately 700 degrees C while retaining their porous structure. However, when exposed to a 3 M KOH solution, the spherical m-NiPP particles undergo a transformation into beta-Ni(OH)2 particles. These transformed particles are approximately 1.5 nm thick, equivalent to 3-4 layers, and 7 nm wide, all while maintaining their spherical morphology. This transformation process occurs rapidly for amorphous m-NiPP and proceeds more slowly in the case of crystalline m-NiPP. The resulting electrodes exhibit a substantial charge capacity of 422 C g-1 and an impressive specific capacitance of over 1407 F g-1.

A novel synthesis method has been devised to create mesoporous nickel pyrophosphate coated graphite electrodes, which undergo a chemical conversion into nickel hydroxide nanoflakes with a notable charge capacity in alkaline media.

Files

bib-4c2e9169-55cc-4ace-b2a8-ba94b5be6c81.txt

Files (236 Bytes)

Name Size Download all
md5:98c6f9e99673c6e584c2a0dfa4c236b0
236 Bytes Preview Download