Abstract

Lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries have attracted great attentions due to their high specific capacity. However, the poor cycle stability caused by polysulfide shuttles, volume expansion and formation of lithium dendrites limit their practical applications. In the present work, to tackle the poor stability and unstable rate capability, a MOF-doping strategy is developed to construct a hollow porous carbon framework,which consists of Ni, Co particles and CNT on a N-doped shell surface (Ni/Co-CNT/NHPC). This hollow framework increases the load of S, slows down the volume changes, and can physically entrap soluble polysulfide. It is found that the CNT-coated network structure is beneficial for optimizing the conductivity and wettability of the material, which accelerates the reaction kinetics. Moreover, synergistic effect of abundant defects and Ni, Co nanoparticles strengthens the chemisorption of polysulfides, which suppresses the shuttle effect. As a consequence, the Ni/Co-CNT/NHPC-S cathode harvests a high specific capacity (1352 mA h g-1), and shows an excellent cycling stability at 1 C with low capacity decay of 0.094% over 500 cycles.

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