Revealing Hydrogen Bond Effect in Rechargeable Aqueous Zinc-Organic Batteries.
Jun GuoJia-Yi DuWan-Qiang LiuGang HuangXin-Bo ZhangPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
The surrounding hydrogen bond (H-bond) interaction around the active sites plays indispensable functions in enabling the organic electrode materials (OEMs) to fulfill their roles as ion reservoirs in aqueous zinc-organic batteries (ZOBs). Despite important, there are still no works could fully shed its real effects light on. Herein, quinone-based small molecules with a H-bond evolution model has been rationally selected to disclose the regulation and equilibration of H-bond interaction between OEMs, and OEM and the electrolyte. It has been found that only a suitable H-bond interaction could make the OEMs fully liberate their potential performance. Accordingly, the 2,5-diaminocyclohexa-2,5-diene-1,4-dione (DABQ) with elaborately designed H-bond structure exhibits a capacity of 193.3 mAh g -1 at a record-high mass loading of 66.2 mg cm -2 and 100 % capacity retention after 1500 cycles at 5 A g -1 . In addition, the DABQ//Zn battery also possesses air-rechargeable ability by utilizing the chemistry redox of proton. Our results put forward a specific pathway to precise utilization of H-bond to liberate the performance of OEMs.