Abstract
Despite the rapid expansion of the organic cathode materials field, there is still a lack of materials obtained through facile synthesis that have stable cycling and high energy density. Herein, we report a two-step synthesis of small organic molecule from commercially available precursors that can be used as a cathode material. Oxidized tetraquinoxalinecatechol (OTQC) was derived from tetraquinoxalinecatechol (TQC) by the introduction of additional quinone redox active centers into the structure. The modification increased the voltage and capacity of the material. The OTQC delivers a high specific capacity of 327 mAhg-1 with an average voltage of 2.63 V vs. Li/Li+ in the Li-ion battery. That corresponds to an energy density of 860 Whkg-1 on the material level. Furthermore, the material demonstrated excellent cycling stability, having a capacity retention of 82 % after 400 cycles. Similarly, the OTQC demonstrates increased average voltage and specific capacity in comparison with TQC in Zn-organic battery using aqueous electrolyte, reaching the specific capacity of 326 mAhg-1 with an average voltage of 0.86 V vs. Zn/Zn2+. Apart from good electrochemical performance, this work provides an additional in-depth analysis of the redox mechanism and degradation mechanism related to capacity fading.
Supplementary materials
Title
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
Description
Detailed experimental ex-situ characterization procedures, additional electrochemical measurements under different test conditions, solubility graph of electrodes in lithium battery, additional SEM images of electrodes and pristine material, additional FT-IR spectra of electrodes, elemental analysis data, electrochemical performance comparison tables of reported small organic cathode materials.
Actions
Title
Graphical abstract
Description
Schematic representation of Li- and Zn- battery based on OTQC cathode material. Graphs on the right represent charge and discharge curves in both battery systems.
Actions