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Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular Engineering with Organic Carbonyl Electrode Materials for Advanced Stationary and Redox Flow Rechargeable Batteries.

Qing Zhao, +2 more
- 01 Dec 2017 - 
- Vol. 29, Iss: 48, pp 1607007
TLDR
A molecular engineering approach for tuning the capacity, working potential, concentration of active species, kinetics, and stability of stationary and redox flow batteries, which well resolves the problems of organic carbonyl electrode materials are summarized.
Abstract
Organic carbonyl electrode materials that have the advantages of high capacity, low cost and being environmentally friendly, are regarded as powerful candidates for next-generation stationary and redox flow rechargeable batteries (RFBs). However, low carbonyl utilization, poor electronic conductivity and undesired dissolution in electrolyte are urgent issues to be solved. Here, we summarize a molecular engineering approach for tuning the capacity, working potential, concentration of active species, kinetics, and stability of stationary and redox flow batteries, which well resolves the problems of organic carbonyl electrode materials. As an example, in stationary batteries, 9,10-anthraquinone (AQ) with two carbonyls delivers a capacity of 257 mAh g-1 (2.27 V vs Li+ /Li), while increasing the number of carbonyls to four with the formation of 5,7,12,14-pentacenetetrone results in a higher capacity of 317 mAh g-1 (2.60 V vs Li+ /Li). In RFBs, AQ, which is less soluble in aqueous electrolyte, reaches 1 M by grafting -SO3 H with the formation of 9,10-anthraquinone-2,7-disulphonic acid, resulting in a power density exceeding 0.6 W cm-2 with long cycling life. Therefore, through regulating substituent groups, conjugated structures, Coulomb interactions, and the molecular weight, the electrochemical performance of carbonyl electrode materials can be rationally optimized. This review offers fundamental principles and insight into designing advanced carbonyl materials for the electrodes of next-generation rechargeable batteries.

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Citations
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Recent Advances in Aqueous Zinc-Ion Batteries

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Designing solid-state electrolytes for safe, energy-dense batteries

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High-capacity aqueous zinc batteries using sustainable quinone electrodes

TL;DR: Batteries using quinone cathodes and metal anodes in aqueous electrolyte are reliable approaches for mass energy storage and an electrostatic potential computing method is developed to demonstrate that carbonyl groups are active centers of electrochemistry.
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Opportunities and Challenges for Organic Electrodes in Electrochemical Energy Storage.

TL;DR: This review provides a comprehensive overview of all reported cell configurations that involve electroactive organic compounds working either in the solid state or in solution for aqueous or nonaqueous electrolytes and highlights the most promising systems based on such various chemistries.
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Molecular engineering of organic electroactive materials for redox flow batteries

TL;DR: This review presents a systematic molecular engineering scheme for designing organic and organometallic redox species in terms of solubility, redox potential, and molecular size and introduces recent advances covering the reaction mechanisms, specific functionalization methods, and electrochemical performances ofredox species classified by their molecular structures.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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