4.8 Article

Cation-Dependent Stabilization of Electrogenerated Naphthalene Diimide Dianions in Porous Polymer Thin Films and Their Application to Electrical Energy Storage

Journal

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION
Volume 54, Issue 45, Pages 13225-13229

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/anie.201505289

Keywords

electrical energy storage devices; electrochemistry; porous polymers; redox processes; supercapacitors

Funding

  1. NSF GRFP [DGE-1144153]
  2. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
  3. Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation
  4. Energy Materials Center at Cornell (emc2), an Energy Frontier Research Center - DOE Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-FG02-87ER45298, DE-SC000001086]
  5. Innovation Economy Matching Grant from the New York State, Empire State Development Division of Science, Technology and Innovation (NYSTAR) [C090148]
  6. Sao Paulo Research Foundation [2013/25527-1]
  7. NSF [DMR-1120296]
  8. Nanobiotechnology Center

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Porous polymer networks (PPNs) are attractive materials for capacitive energy storage because they offer high surface areas for increased double-layer capacitance, open structures for rapid ion transport, and redox-active moieties that enable faradaic (pseudocapacitive) energy storage. Here we demonstrate a new attractive feature of PPNsthe ability of their reduced forms (radical anions and dianions) to interact with small radii cations through synergistic interactions arising from densely packed redox-active groups, only when prepared as thin films. When naphthalene diimides (NDIs) are incorporated into PPN films, the carbonyl groups of adjacent, electrochemically generated, NDI radical anions and dianions bind strongly to K+, Li+, and Mg2+, shifting the formal potentials of NDI's second reduction by 120 and 460mV for K+ and Li+-based electrolytes, respectively. In the case of Mg2+, NDI's two redox waves coalesce into a single two-electron process with shifts of 240 and 710mV, for the first and second reductions, respectively, increasing the energy density by over 20% without changing the polymer backbone. In contrast, the formal reduction potentials of NDI derivatives in solution are identical for each electrolyte, and this effect has not been reported for NDI previously. This study illustrates the profound influence of the solid-state structure of a polymer on its electrochemical response, which does not simply reflect the solution-phase redox behavior of its monomers.

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