ABSTRACT
Nickel sulfides have drawn much attention with the benefits of a high redox activity, high electrical conductivity, low cost, and fabrication ease; however, these metal sulfides are susceptible to mechanical degradation regarding their cycling performance. Conversely, hollow carbon shells exhibit a substantial electrochemical steadiness in energy storage applications. Here, the design and development of a novel millerite core-nitrogen-doped carbon hollow shell (NiS-NC HS) structure for electrochemical energy storage is presented. The nitrogen-doped carbon hollow shell (NC HS) protects against the degradation and the millerite-core aggregation, giving rise to an excellent rate capability and stability during the electrochemical charging-discharging processes, in addition to improving the NiS-NC HS conductivity. The NiS-NC HS/18h supercapacitor electrode displays an outstanding specific capacitance of 1170.72 F g-1 (at 0.5 A g-1 ) and maintains 90.71% (at 6 A g-1 ) of its initial capacitance after 4000 charge-discharge cycles, owing to the unique core-shell structure. An asymmetric-supercapacitor device using NiS-NC HS and activated-carbon electrodes exhibits a high power and energy density with a remarkable cycling stability, maintaining 89.2% of its initial capacitance after 5000 cycles.
ABSTRACT
Nickel cobalt sulfide nanoparticles embedded in holey defect graphene hydrogel (HGH) that exhibit highly porous structures and uniform nickel cobalt sulfide nanoparticle sizes are successfully prepared by a facile solvothermal-hydrothermal method. As an electrode material for supercapacitors, the as-prepared NiCo2 S4 @HGH shows ultra-high specific capacitances of 1000â F g-1 and 800â F g-1 at 0.5 and 6â A g-1 , respectively, owing to the outstanding electrical conductivity of HGH and high specific capacitance of NiCo2 S4 . After 2100 charge/discharge cycles at a current density of 6â A g-1 , 96.6 % of the specific capacitance was retained, signifying the superb durability of NiCo2 S4 @HGH. Moreover, remarkable specific capacitance (312.6â F g-1 ) and capacity retention (87 % after 5000â cycles) at 6â A g-1 were displayed by the symmetric solid-state supercapacitor fabricated by using NiCo2 S4 @HGH electrodes. These auspicious supercapacitor performances demonstrate that the as-developed solvothermal-hydrothermal approach can be widely used to prepare graphene-coupled binary metal sulfides for high-performance supercapacitor applications.
ABSTRACT
Three-dimensional, vertically aligned MnO/nitrogen-doped graphene (3D MnO/N-Gr) walls were prepared through facile solution-phase synthesis followed by thermal treatment. Polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) was strategically added to generate cross-links to simultaneously form 3D wall structures and to incorporate nitrogen atoms into the graphene network. The unique wall features of the as-prepared 3D MnO/N-Gr hybirdes provide a large surface area (91.516 m(2) g(-1)) and allow for rapid diffusion of the ion electrolyte, resulting in a high specific capacitance of 378 F g(-1) at 0.25 A g(-1) and an excellent charge/discharge stability (93.7% capacity retention after 8000 cycles) in aqueous 1 m Na2 SO4 solution as electrolyte. Moreover, the symmetric supercapacitors that were rationally designed by using 3D MnO/N-Gr hybrids exhibit outstanding electrochemical performance in an organic electrolyte with an energy density of 90.6 Wh kg(-1) and a power density of 437.5 W kg(-1).