Abstract

Here, we report a simple and green electrochemical route to fabricate a porous network of a Fe3O4 nanoparticle-porous reduced graphene oxide (p-rGO) nanocomposite supported on a nickel-foam substrate, which is directly used as a binder-free charge storage electrode. Through this method, pristine Fe3O4 NPs/Ni, p-rGO/Ni and Fe3O4 NPs@p-rGO/Ni electrodes are fabricated and compared. In the fabricated Fe3O4 NPs@p-rGO/Ni electrode, the porous rGO sheets served as a conductive network to facilitate the collection and transportation of electrons during the charge/discharge cycles, improving the conductivity of magnetite NPs and providing a larger specific surface area. As a result, the Fe3O4 NPs@p-rGO/Ni exhibited a specific capacitance of 1323 F g−1 at 0.5 A g−1 and 79% capacitance retention when the current density is increased 20 times, where the Fe3O4 NPs/Ni electrode showed low specific capacitance of 357 F g−1 and 43% capacity retention. Furthermore, the composite electrode kept 95.1% and 86.7% of its initial capacitances at the current densities of 1 and 4 A g−1, respectively, which were higher than those of a Fe3O4/NF electrode at similar loads (i.e. 80.4% and 65.9% capacitance retentions at 1 and 4 A g−1, respectively). These beneficial effects proved the synergistic contribution between p-rGO and Fe3O4. Hence, such ultrafine magnetite particles grown onto a porous reduced GO network directly imprinted onto a Ni substrate could be a promising candidate for high performance energy storage aims.

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