Flowery nickel–cobalt hydroxide via a solid–liquid sulphur ion grafting route and its application in hybrid supercapacitive storage†
Abstract
In our research, a two-step solid–liquid route was employed to fabricate flowery nickel–cobalt hydroxide with sulphur ion grafting (Ni1Co2–S). The utilization of NaOH/agar and Na2S/agar could efficiently retard the release rates of OH− or S2− ions at the solid–liquid interface due to strong bonding between agar hydrogel and these anions. Ni1Co2–S generally displays ultrathin flowery micro-frame, ultrathin internal nanosheets and expanded pore size. Besides, the introduction of suitable sulphide species into nickel–cobalt hydroxide could improve its conductivity due to the lower band gap of Ni–Co sulphide. The supercapacitive electrode Ni1Co2–S presented capacitance of 1317.8 F g−1 (at 1 A g−1) and suitable rate performance (77.9% at 10 A g−1 and 59.3% at 20 A g−1). Furthermore, a hybrid supercapacitor (HSC) was developed utilizing positive Ni1Co2–S and negative activated carbon electrodes. As expected, the HSC device exhibited excellent specific capacitance (117.1 F g−1 at 1 A g−1), considerable energy densities (46.7 W h kg−1 at 0.845 kW kg−1 and 27.5 W h kg−1 even at 9 kW kg−1) and suitable cycling performance, which further illuminated the high energy storage capacity of Ni1Co2–S.