A simple two-step approach has been
employed to synthesize a cobalt–nickel–copper
ternary metal oxide, involving electrochemical precipitation/deposition
followed by calcination. The ternary metal hydroxide gets precipitated/deposited
from a nitrate bath at the cathode in the catholyte chamber of a two-compartment
diaphragm cell at room temperature having a pH ≈ 3. The microstructure
of the ternary hydroxides was modified in situ by two different surfactants
such as cetyltrimethylammonium bromide and dodecyltrimethylammonium
bromide in the bath aiming for enhanced storage performance in the
electrochemical devices. The effect of the surfactant produces a transition
from microspheres to nanosheets, and the effect of micelle concentration
produces nanospheres at a higher ion concentration. The ternary hydroxides
were calcined at 300 °C to obtain the desired ternary mixed oxide
materials as the electrode for hybrid supercapacitors. X-ray diffraction
analysis confirmed the formation of the ternary metal oxide product.
The scanning electron microscopy images associated with energy-dispersive
analysis suggest the formation of a nanostructured porous composite.
Ternary metal oxide in the absence and presence of a surfactant served
as the cathode and activated carbon served as the anode for supercapacitor
application. DTAB-added metal oxide showed 95.1% capacitance retention
after 1000 cycles, achieving 188 F/g at a current density of 0.1 A/g,
and thereafter stable until 5000 cycles, inferring that more transition
metals in the oxide along with suitable surfactants at an appropriate
micellar concentration may be better for redox reactions and achieving
higher electrical conductivity and smaller charge transfer resistance.
The role of various metal cations and surfactants as additives in
the electrolytic bath has been discussed.
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