Ultra-stable cycling of organic carboxylate molecule hydrogen bonded with inorganic Ti3C2Tx MXene with improved redox kinetics for sodium-ion batteries

  • Jiabao Li*
  • , Jingjing Hao
  • , Ruoxing Wang
  • , Quan Yuan
  • , Tianyi Wang
  • , Likun Pan*
  • , Junfeng Li
  • , Chengyin Wang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

The application of small organic molecules for sodium-ion batteries is generally plagued by their high solubility, poor conductivity, and sluggish redox dynamics in organic electrolyte, thus developing efficient strategies to restrain solubilization while obtaining fast charge transfer becomes a challenge. Herein, a rational hybridization strategy through hydrogen bond between organic molecule and inorganic substrate has been proposed, employing the terminal –C═O of trisodium 1, 2, 4-benzenetricarboxylate (TBC) molecule and –OH groups of inorganic Ti3C2Tx MXene, respectively. In general, such a design evidently mitigates the aggregation of both TBC molecules and Ti3C2Tx MXene. Furthermore, the robust hydrogen bonding significantly mitigates the dissolution of TBC and guarantees the robust coupling between them, thus contributing to the integrity of electrode and modifying the electrochemical sodium storage in both half and full cells. Moreover, the systematic kinetic analysis and mechanism detection reveal improved charge transportation and robust two-electron electrochemical reversibility of the hybrid TBC/Ti3C2Tx. Taken together, this work demonstrates a potential novel strategy toward stable and practical organic battery chemistries through hydrogen bonding with inorganic compounds.

Original languageEnglish
Article number20230033
JournalBattery Energy
Volume3
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2024

Keywords

  • TiCT MXene
  • carboxylate molecule
  • hydrogen bond
  • redox kinetics
  • sodium storage

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