| Literature DB >> 30746090 |
Louis Sieuw1, Alia Jouhara2, Éric Quarez2, Chloé Auger2, Jean-François Gohy1, Philippe Poizot2, Alexandru Vlad1.
Abstract
Small organic materials are generally plagued by their high solubility in battery electrolytes. Finding approaches to suppress solubilization while not penalizing gravimetric capacity remains a challenge. Here we propose the concept of a hydrogen bond stabilized organic battery framework as a viable solution. This is illustrated for 2,5-diamino-1,4-benzoquinone (DABQ), an electrically neutral and low mass organic chemical, yet with unusual thermal stability and low solubility in battery electrolytes. These properties are shown to arise from hydrogen bond molecular crystal stabilization, confirmed by a suite of techniques including X-ray diffraction and infrared spectroscopy. We also establish a quantitative correlation between the electrolyte solvent polarity, molecular structure of the electrolyte and DABQ solubility - then correlate these to the cycling stability. Notably, DABQ displays a highly reversible (above 99%) sequential 2-electron electrochemical activity in the solid phase, a process rarely observed for similar small molecular battery chemistries. Taken together, these results reveal a potential new strategy towards stable and practical organic battery chemistries through intramolecular hydrogen-bonding crystal stabilization.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30746090 PMCID: PMC6335633 DOI: 10.1039/c8sc02995d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1Ab initio structure determination of DABQ. (A) X-ray powder diffraction pattern (final Rietveld refinement) of crystalline DABQ with the molecular structure depicted in the inset. (B) View of the solved DABQ crystal structure (yellow dotted line: intramolecular H-bonds; green dotted line: intermolecular H-bonds).
Fig. 2Stabilization of the DABQ molecular crystal through H-bonding. (A) Molecular structure of DABQ and of the reference compounds (i.e., BQ and p-PDA) and their corresponding (B) FTIR spectra as well as (C) thermogravimetry (TG) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) plots. The stars mark the melting point in the DSC plots.
Fig. 3Solubility of DABQ in different electrolyte formulations and consequences for cycling reversibility. (A) Saturation concentration of DABQ in a series of representative electrolytes and (B) the corresponding half-cell cycling stability at a lithium insertion/extraction rate of 1Li+/1e– in 10 h (i.e. equivalent to 40 hours per one full cycle). (C) Solubility of DABQ in TEGDME/DOL electrolyte as a function of LiTFSI supporting salt concentration and (D) the associated potential–composition traces for the 1st cycle.
Fig. 4Monitoring the reversible solid-state electrochemical Li insertion/deinsertion process occurring in DABQ using TEGDME : DOL 1 : 1 LiTFSI 1 M as the electrolyte. (A) A typical potential–composition curve for a Li half-cell using DABQ as the positive electrode cycled in GITT mode at a rate of 1Li+/10 h for Δx = 0.2 followed by an OCV period of 2 hours. (B) Ex situ FTIR of the pristine (P), two-electron reduced (R2) and two-electron oxidized (O2) DABQ. (C) In situ X-ray diffraction powder patterns of an electrode made of DABQ collected during the first cycle. The cell was cycled in the 2.0–2.8 V potential range using an intermittent galvanostatic mode. More specifically, a cycling rate of 1Li+/10 h was applied for a period of 2 h, separated by resting periods of 1 h during which the XRD patterns were collected. Note that XRD patterns labelled (P) and (O2) formally correspond to the DABQ crystallized form, (R1) and (O1) to the monolithiated semiquinone radical form Li1C6H6N2O2, and (R2) to the fully lithiated Li2C6H6N2O2 phase.