Zinc cobalt sulfide (ZnS–CoS) nanoparticles have emerged as promising electrode materials for supercapacitors
due to their excellent electrochemical properties. However, achieving both high energy density
and power density remains a challenge due to particle agglomeration and instability. In this work,
dynamic light scattering-based optimization of ZnS–CoS nanoparticles is carried out by adjusting
synthetic parameters including temperature, pH, reagent addition rate, and stabilizer concentration, resulting
in significantly smaller particle sizes and improved stability. The optimized ZnS–CoS nanoparticle-based
electrode exhibited an exceptional specific capacitance of 1156 F g1, an energy density of 194 Wh kg1,
and a power density of 7260 W kg1, which are significantly higher than the values reported in the literature.
Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) results confirmed lower charge transfer resistance (35.88 O),
indicating faster ion transport and enhanced conductivity. Moreover, the optimized ZnS–CoS electrode
demonstrated remarkable cycling stability, retaining 93.87% capacitance after 10000 cycles. The charge
transfer mechanism was understood by computational studies and four different machine learning models,
namely, stacking regressor, TPOT, ANN, and RSM models, which were applied to verify the experimental
specific capacitance of ZnS. The accuracy of performance is best for the stacking regression model, followed
by ANN, TPOT, and RSM models. These results highlight the critical role of nanoparticle size optimization
in enhancing the electrochemical performance and demonstrate DLS-optimized ZnS–CoS as a superior
candidate for next-generation supercapacitors.
تاريخ النشر
03 جمادى الأول 1447
تاريخ أخر تعديل
03 جمادى الأول 1447