4.7 Article

Highly Stable Indacenodithieno[3,2-b]thiophene-Based Donor-Acceptor Copolymers for Hybrid Electrochromic and Energy Storage Applications

Journal

MACROMOLECULES
Volume 53, Issue 24, Pages 11106-11119

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.0c02212

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [2015-04853, 2016-06146, 2019-02345, 2019-04683]
  2. Swedish Research Council Formas
  3. Wallenberg Foundation [2017.0186, 2016.0059]
  4. Emil Aaltonen Foundation
  5. Australian Government through the Australian Research Council's Discovery Projects funding scheme [DP160102356]
  6. Defence Innovation Partnership (DIP)
  7. Vinnova [2019-04683, 2019-02345] Funding Source: Vinnova
  8. Swedish Research Council [2015-04853, 2019-02345, 2019-04683] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

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Stable doping of indacenodithieno[3,2-b]thiophene (IDTT) structures enables easy color tuning and significant improvement in the charge storage capacity of electrochromic polymers, making use of their full potential as electrochromic supercapacitors and in other emerging hybrid applications. Here, the IDTT structure is copolymerized with four different donor-acceptor-donor (DAD) units, with subtle changes in their electron-donating and electron-withdrawing characters, so as to obtain four different donor-acceptor copolymers. The polymers attain important form factor requirements for electrochromic supercapacitors: desired switching between achromatic black and transparent states (L*a*b* 45.9, -3.1, -4.2/86.7, -2.2, and -2.7 for PIDTT-TBT), high optical contrast (72% for PIDTT-TBzT), and excellent electrochemical redox stability (I-red/I-ox ca. 1.0 for PIDTT-EBE). Poly[indacenodithieno[3,2-b]thiophene-2,8-diyhalt-4,7-bis(2,3-dihydrothieno [3,4- b] [1,4]dioxin-5-y1)-2- (2-heryldecyI)-2H-benzo [d] [1,2,3] triazole-7,7'-diyl] (PIDTT-EBzE) stands out as delivering simultaneously a high contrast (69%) and doping level (>100%) and specific capacitance (260 F g(-1)). This work introduces IDTT-based polymers as bifunctional electro-optical materials for potential use in color-tailored, colorindicating, and self-regulating smart energy systems.

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