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.

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