Supercapacitor Electrodes: Is Nickel Foam the Right Substrate for Active Materials?

Materials (Basel)

Institute for Multidisciplinary Research, University of Belgrade, Kneza Višeslava 1, 11030 Belgrade, Serbia.

Published: March 2024

Ni foam is an extensively used current collector and substrate in investigations of electrochemically active materials such as supercapacitors and electrocatalysts for oxygen and hydrogen evolution reactions. This material is relatively cheap, porous, and conductive and has a large specific surface area, all of which make it a good substrate. We investigated Ni-Mg ferrites and NiMnO as active materials for electrochemical energy storage. These materials, when loaded on Ni foam, gave promising capacitance values: 172 F/g (at 2 mV/s) for NiMnO in 6 M KOH and 242 F/g (at 2 mV/s) for MgFeO in 3 M KOH. Nevertheless, during the authors' work, many experimental problems occurred. Inconsistencies in the results directed further investigation towards measuring the capacitance of the active materials using GCE and platinum electrodes as substrates to discover if Ni foam was the culprit of the inconsistencies. When non-nickel substrates were used, both NiMnO and MgFeO showed reduced capacitance. Experimental problems associated with the utilization of Ni foam as a substrate for active materials in supercapacitor electrodes are discussed here, combined with other problems already addressed in the scientific literature.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10971949PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma17061292DOI Listing

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