Organic electrode materials are very attractive for electrochemical energy storage devices because they can be flexible, lightweight, low cost, benign to the environment, and used in a variety of device architectures. They are not mere alternatives to more traditional energy storage materials, rather, they have the potential to lead to disruptive technologies. Although organic electrode materials for energy storage have progressed in recent years, there are still significant challenges to overcome before reaching large-scale commercialization. This review provides an overview of energy storage systems as a whole, the metrics that are used to quantify the performance of electrodes, recent strategies that have been investigated to overcome the challenges associated with organic electrode materials, and the use of computational chemistry to design and study new materials and their properties. Design strategies are examined to overcome issues with capacity/capacitance, device voltage, rate capability, and cycling stability in order to guide future work in the area. The use of low cost materials is highlighted as a direction towards commercial realization.
Whereas organic-inorganic hybrid perovskite nanocrystals (PNCs) have remarkable potential in the development of optoelectronic materials, their relatively poor chemical and colloidal stability undermines their performance in optoelectronic devices. Herein, this issue is addressed by passivating PNCs with a class of chemically addressable ligands. The robust ligands effectively protect the PNC surfaces, enhance PNC solution processability, and can be chemically addressed by thermally induced crosslinking or radical-induced polymerization. This thin polymer shield further enhances the photoluminescence quantum yields by removing surface trap states. Crosslinked methylammonium lead bromide (MAPbBr ) PNCs are applied as active materials to build light-emitting diodes that have low turn-on voltages and achieve a record luminance of over 7000 cd m , around threefold better than previous reported MA-based PNC devices. These results indicate the great potential of this ligand passivation approach for long lifespan, highly efficient PNC light emitters.
Biologically derived organic molecules are a cost‐effective and environmentally benign alternative to the widely used metal‐based electrodes employed in current energy storage technologies. Here, the first bio‐derived pendant polymer cathode for lithium‐ion batteries is reported. The redox moiety is flavin and is derived from riboflavin (vitamin B2). A semi‐synthetic methodology is used to prepare the pendant polymer, which is composed of a poly(norbornene) backbone and pendant flavin units. This semi‐synthetic approach reduces the number of chemical transformations required to form this new functional material. Lithium‐ion batteries incorporating this polymer have a 125 mAh g−1 capacity and an ≈2.5 V operating potential. It is found that charge transport is greatly improved by forming hierarchical structures of the polymer with carbon black, and new insight into electrode degradation mechanisms is provided which should be applicable to polymer electrodes in general. This work provides a foundation for the use of bio‐derived pendant polymers in sustainable, high‐performance lithium‐ion batteries.
Perylene diimides (PDIs) are one of the most widely studied n-type materials, showing great promise as electron acceptors in organic photovoltaic devices and as electron transport materials in n-channel organic fi eld effect transistors. Amongst the well-established chemical modifi cation strategies for increasing the electron mobility of PDI, substitution of the imide oxygen atoms with sulfur, known as thionation, has remained largely unexplored. In this work, it is demonstrated that thionation is a highly effective means of enhancing the electron mobility of a bis-N -alkylated PDI derivative. Successive oxygen-sulfur substitution increases the electron mobility such that the fully thionated derivative ( S4 ) has an average mobility of 0.16 cm 2 V −1 s −1 . This is two orders of magnitude larger than the nonthionated parent compound ( P ), and is achieved by solution deposition and without thermal or solvent vapor annealing. A combination of atomic force microscopy and 2D wide angle X-ray scattering experiments, together with theoretical modeling of charge transport effi ciency, is used to explain the strong positive correlation observed between electron mobility and degree of thionation. This work establishes thionation as a highly effective means of enhancing the electron mobility of PDI, and provides motivation for the development of thionated PDI derivatives for organic electronics applications.
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