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High-performance organic pseudocapacitors via molecular contortion.

Jake C RussellVictoria A PoseyJesse GrayRichard MayDouglas A ReedHao ZhangLauren E MarbellaMichael L SteigerwaldYuan YangXavier RoyColin P NuckollsSamuel R Peurifoy
Published in: Nature materials (2021)
Pseudocapacitors harness unique charge-storage mechanisms to enable high-capacity, rapidly cycling devices. Here we describe an organic system composed of perylene diimide and hexaazatrinaphthylene exhibiting a specific capacitance of 689 F g-1 at a rate of 0.5 A g-1, stability over 50,000 cycles, and unprecedented performance at rates as high as 75 A g-1. We incorporate the material into two-electrode devices for a practical demonstration of its potential in next-generation energy-storage systems. We identify the source of this exceptionally high rate charge storage as surface-mediated pseudocapacitance, through a combination of spectroscopic, computational and electrochemical measurements. By underscoring the importance of molecular contortion and complementary electronic attributes in the selection of molecular components, these results provide a general strategy for the creation of organic high-performance energy-storage materials.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
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  • mass spectrometry
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