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1.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; : e202408697, 2024 Jun 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38923631

ABSTRACT

Solar-to-hydrogen (H2) and oxygen (O2) conversion via photocatalytic overall water splitting (OWS) holds great promise for a sustainable fuel economy, but has been challenged by the backward O2 reduction reaction (ORR) with favored proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) dynamics. Here, we report that molecular engineering by methylation inhibits the backward ORR of molecular photocatalysts and enables efficient OWS process. As demonstrated by a benchmark sulfone-based covalent organic framework (COF) photocatalyst, the precise methylation of its O2 adsorption sites effectively blocks electron transfer and increases the barrier for hydrogen intermediate desorption that cooperatively obstructs the PCET process of ORR. Methylation also repels electrons to the neighboring photocatalytic sulfone group that promotes the forward H2 evolution. The resultant DS-COF achieves an impressive inhibition of about 70 % of the backward reaction and a three-fold enhancement of the OWS performance with a H2 evolution rate of 124.7 µmol h-1 g-1, ranking among the highest reported for organic-based photocatalysts. This work provides insights for engineering photocatalysts at the molecular level for efficient solar-to-fuel conversion.

2.
Acc Chem Res ; 57(12): 1736-1746, 2024 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38836507

ABSTRACT

ConspectusSolar-to-electrochemical energy storage is one of the essential solar energy utilization pathways alongside solar-to-electricity and solar-to-chemical conversion. A coupled solar battery enables direct solar-to-electrochemical energy storage via photocoupled ion transfer using photoelectrochemical materials with light absorption/charge transfer and redox capabilities. Common photoelectrochemical materials face challenges due to insufficient solar spectrum utilization, which restricts their redox potential window and constrains energy conversion efficiency. In contrast, molecular photoelectrochemical energy storage materials are promising for their mechanism of exciton-involved redox reaction that allows for extra energy utilization from hot excitons generated by superbandgap excitation and localized heat after absorption of sub-bandgap photons. This enables more efficient redox reactions with a less restricted redox potentials window and, thus, better utilization of the full solar spectrum. Despite these advantages, practical application remains elusive due to the mismatch between the short lifetime of the charge separation state (µs). This mismatch results in a significant portion of the photogenerated charges recombining before participating in desired electrochemical energy storage reactions, leading to diminished overall efficiency. It is therefore highly important to develop molecular materials with intrinsic prolonged charge separation state and extrinsic effective mass-electron transfer to enable efficient coupled solar batteries for practical applications.In this Account, we begin with an introduction of the general solar-to-electrochemical energy storage concept based on molecular photoelectrochemical energy storage materials, highlighting the advantages of periodic oxidative donor-reductive acceptor porous aggregate structures that have synergistic implications on charge separation state lifetime extension and mass-electron transfer. We then present our earliest trial on the design and application of molecular photoelectrochemical energy storage materials, which stimulated our subsequent studies on tuning electron donor and acceptor structures for enhanced charge separation and diverse photoelectrochemical redox reactions. Moreover, we introduce the best practices in the design and assembly of various coupled solar battery devices, along with our literature contributions and progresses in solar-to-electrochemical energy storage efficiency (ηSES) over nearly the past decade. Finally, we conclude by highlighting the universality of our strategies as essential design principles, spanning from regulating long-lived charge separation states and photocoupled ion transfer processes in molecular materials to the construction of efficient coupled solar batteries. We offer perspectives on the synergy between photovoltage and redox potentials and the practical significance of 3D printing, providing key evaluation indicators for large-scale application. This Account provides molecular level insights for the construction of high-efficiency photoelectrochemical energy storage materials and guidance for practical solar-to-electrochemical energy storage applications.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(23): 16229-16236, 2024 Jun 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38815186

ABSTRACT

Employing covalent organic frameworks (COFs) for the photocatalytic CO2 reduction reaction (CDRR) to generate high-value chemical fuels and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions represents a sustainable catalytic conversion approach. However, achieving superior photocatalytic CDRR performance is hindered by the challenges of low charge separation efficiency, poor stability, and high preparation costs associated with COFs. Herein, in this work, we utilized perfluorinated metallophthalocyanine (MPcF16) and the organic biomolecule compound ellagic acid (EA) as building blocks to actualize functional covalent organic frameworks (COFs) named EPM-COF (M = Co, Ni, Cu). The designed EPCo-COF, featuring cobalt metal active sites, demonstrated an impressive CO production rate and selectivity in the photocatalytic CO2 reduction reaction (CDRR). Moreover, following alkaline treatment (EPCo-COF-AT), the COF exposed carboxylic acid anion (COO-) and hydroxyl group (OH), thereby enhancing the electron-donating capability of EA. This modification achieved a heightened CO production rate of 17.7 mmol g-1 h-1 with an outstanding CO selectivity of 97.8% in efficient photocatalytic CDRR. Theoretical calculations further illustrated that EPCo-COF-AT functionalized with COO- and OH can effectively alleviate the energy barriers involved in the CDRR process, which facilitates the proton-coupled electron transfer processes and enhances the photocatalytic performance on the cobalt active sites within EPCo-COF-AT.

4.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 60(25): 3405-3408, 2024 Mar 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38440822

ABSTRACT

A multicomponent covalent organic framework (COF-Tfp-BpyDaaq) integrating bipyridine with diaminoanthraquinone through a triformylphoroglucinol linkage was synthesized for the first time as a photocatalyst for overall H2O2 photosynthesis. It exhibits enhanced photo-charge separation and H2O2 production rate over its two-component counterparts, demonstrating the pivotal role of multicomponent synthesis in designing efficient photocatalysts.

5.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(19): e202400999, 2024 May 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38489230

ABSTRACT

Photocatalytic oxygen reduction to produce hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is a promising route to providing oxidants for various industrial applications. However, the lack of well-designed photocatalysts for efficient overall H2O2 production in pure water has impeded ongoing research and practical thrusts. Here we present a cyanide-based covalent organic framework (TBTN-COFs) combining 2,4,6-trimethylbenzene-1,3,5-tricarbonitrile (TBTN) and benzotrithiophene-2,5,8-tricarbaldehyde (BTT) building blocks with water-affinity and charge-separation. The ultrafast intramolecular electron transfer (<500 fs) and prolonged excited state lifetime (748 ps) can be realized by TBTN-COF, resulting in a hole accumulated BTT and electron-rich TBTN building block. Under one sun, the 11013 µmol h-1 g-1 yield rate of H2O2 can be achieved without any sacrificial agent, outperforming most previous reports. Furthermore, the DFT calculation and in situ DRIFTS spectrums suggesting a Yeager-type absorption of *O2⋅- intermediate in the cyanide active site, which prohibits the formation of superoxide radical and revealing a favored H2O2 production pathway.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(11): 7771-7778, 2024 Mar 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38453653

ABSTRACT

Ammonia splitting to hydrogen is a decisive route for hydrogen economy but is seriously limited by the complex device and low efficiency. Here, we design and propose a new rechargeable Zn-NH3 battery based on temporally decoupled ammonia splitting to achieve efficient NH3-to-H2 conversion. In this system, ammonia is oxidized into nitrogen during cathodic charging (2NH3 + 6OH- → N2 + 6H2O + 6e-) with external electrical energy conversion and storage, while during cathodic discharging, water is reduced to hydrogen (2H2O + 2e- → H2 + 2OH-) with electrical energy generation. In this loop, continuous and efficient H2 production without separation and purification is achieved. With the help of the ammonia oxidation reaction (AOR) and hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) bifunctional catalyst of Mo2C/NiCu@C, a rechargeable Zn-NH3 battery is realized that exhibits a high NH3-to-H2 FE of 91.6% with outstanding durability for 900 cycles (300 h) at 20 mA/cm2, enabling efficient and continuous NH3-to-H2 conversion.

7.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(13): e202318136, 2024 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38311595

ABSTRACT

The efficient polymeric semiconducting photocatalyst for solar-driven sluggish kinetics with multielectron transfer oxygen evolution has spurred scientific interest. However, existing photocatalysts limited by π-conjugations, visible-light harvest, and charge transfer often compromise the O2 production rate. Herein, we introduced an alternative strategy involving a boranil functionalized-based fully π-conjugated ordered donor and acceptor (D-A) covalent organic frameworks (Ni-TAPP-COF-BF2 ) photocatalyst. The co-catalyst-free Ni-TAPP-COF-BF2 exhibits an excellent ~11-fold photocatalytic water oxidation rate, reaching 1404 µmol g-1 h-1 under visible light irradiation compared to pristine Ni-TAPP-COF (123 µmol g-1 h-1 ) alone and surpasses to reported organic frameworks counterpart. Both experimental and theoretical results demonstrate that the push/pull mechanism (metalloporphyrin/BF2 ) is responsible for the appropriate light-harvesting properties and extending π-conjugation through chelating BF2 moieties. This strategy benefits in narrowing band structure, improving photo-induced charge separation, and prolonged charge recombination. Further, the lower spin magnetic moment of M-TAPP-COF-BF2 and the closer d-band center of metal sites toward the Fermi level lead to a lower energy barrier for *O intermediate. Reveal the potential of the functionalization strategy and opens up an alternative approach for engineering future photocatalysts in energy conversion applications.

8.
Sci Adv ; 10(3): eadk8564, 2024 Jan 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38232160

ABSTRACT

Photocatalytic water oxidation is a key half-reaction for various solar-to-fuel conversion systems but requires simultaneous water affinity and hole accumulation at the photocatalytic site. Here, we present the rational design and synthesis of an ionic-type covalent organic framework (COF) named tetraphenylporphyrin cobalt and cobalt bipyridine complex (CoTPP-CoBpy3) COF, combining cobalt porphyrin and cobalt bipyridine building blocks as a photocatalyst for water oxidation. The good dispersibility of porous large-size (>2 micrometers) COF nanosheets (≈1.45 nanometers) facilitates local water collection; the ultrafast triplet-state charge transfer (1.8 picoseconds) and prolonged charge separation (1.2 nanoseconds) further contribute to the efficient accumulation of holes in the CoTPP moiety, leading to a photocatalytic dioxygen production rate of 7323 micromoles per gram per hour. Moreover, we have identified an end-on superoxide radical (O2·) intermediate at the active site of the CoTPP moiety and proposed an electron-intermediate cascade mechanism that elucidates the synergistic coupling of electron relay (S1-T1-T1') and intermediate evolution during the photocatalytic process.

9.
Sensors (Basel) ; 23(22)2023 Nov 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38005494

ABSTRACT

Secure and reliable active debris removal methods are crucial for maintaining the stability of the space environment. Continuum robots, with their hyper-redundant degrees of freedom, offer the ability to capture targets of varying sizes and shapes through whole-arm grasping, making them well-suited for active debris removal missions. This paper proposes a pre-grasping motion planning method for continuum robots based on an improved artificial potential field to restrict the movement area of the grasping target and prevent its escape during the pre-grasping phase. The analysis of the grasping workspace ensures that the target is within the workspace when starting the pre-grasping motion planning by dividing the continuum robot into delivery and grasping segments. An improved artificial potential field is proposed to guide the continuum robot in surrounding the target and creating a grasping area. Specifically, the improved artificial potential field consists of a spatial rotating potential field, an attractive potential field incorporating position and posture potential fields, and a repulsive potential field. The simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method. A comparison of motion planning results between methods that disregard and consider the posture potential field shows that the inclusion of the posture potential field improves the performance of pre-grasping motion planning for spatial targets, achieving a success rate of up to 97.8%.

10.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(32): 18141-18147, 2023 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37549025

ABSTRACT

Artificial photosynthesis is an attractive approach to direct fuel production from sunlight. However, the simultaneous O2 evolution reaction (OER) and CO2 reduction reaction (CDRR) present challenges for product separation and safety. Herein, we propose a strategy to temporally decouple artificial photosynthesis through photoelectrochemical energy storage. We utilized a covalent organic framework (DTCo-COF) with redox-active electron donors (-C-OH moieties) and catalytically active electron acceptors (cobalt-porphyrin) to enable reversible -C-OH/-C═O redox reaction and redox-promoted CO2-to-CO photoreduction. Integrating the COF photocathode with an OER photoanode in a photoelectrochemical device allows the effective storage of OER-generated electrons and protons by -C═O groups. These stored charges can be later employed for CDRR while regenerating -C═O to complete the loop, thus enabling on-demand and separate production of O2 or solar fuels. Our work sets the stage for advancements in decoupled artificial photosynthesis and the development of more efficient solar fuel production technologies.

11.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 59(63): 9615-9617, 2023 Aug 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37462390

ABSTRACT

A three-dimensional metal-covalent organic framework (3D-MCOF) based on cyclic trinuclear units was synthesized using organic tetrahedral linkers and copper-based cyclic trinuclear complexes. The novel type of 3D-MCOF, named 3D-CTU-MCOF, with the ctn topology, is reported herein for the first time. Our study demonstrated enhanced electrocatalytic capacity for CO2 reduction reaction of 3D-CTU-MCOF compared to independent cyclic trinuclear units.

12.
Acc Chem Res ; 56(12): 1645-1655, 2023 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37282625

ABSTRACT

ConspectusIn the pursuit of maximizing the energy supply and sustainable energy development, high-energy-density energy storage systems beyond lithium-ion batteries are surging. The metal-catalysis battery, composed of a metal anode, electrolyte, and redox-coupled electrocatalyst cathode with gas, liquid, or solid as active reactants, is regarded as a promising energy storage and conversion system due to its dual functions of energy storage and chemical production. In this system, with the assistance of a redox-coupled catalyst, during discharging, the reduction potential energy of the metal anode is converted into chemicals along with electrical energy generation, while the external electrical energy is translated to the reduction potential energy of the metal anode and the oxidation potential energy of the reactants during charging. In this loop, the electrical energy and sometimes chemicals can be generated simultaneously. Although intensive effort has been devoted to the exploration of redox-coupled catalysts, the essence of the metal-catalysis battery, which is the prerequisite for further development and application, has been overlooked.In this Account, we present the journey of the metal-catalysis battery from development to essence and application and propose that the metal-catalysis battery system, which combines energy storage and electrocatalytic redox reactions with the characteristics of temporal decoupling and spatial coupling and an energy-conversion paradigm from electrical energy to chemicals via electrochemical energy storage, is achieved. First, inspired by the Zn-air/Li-air battery, we developed and realized Li-CO2/Zn-CO2 batteries and enriched the functions of the metal-catalysis battery from energy storage to chemical production. Based on OER/ORR and OER/CDRR catalysts, we have further explored OER/NO3-RR and HzOR/HER coupled catalysts and developed Zn-nitrate and Zn-hydrazine batteries. By extending the redox-coupled electrocatalyst systems from O, C species to N species and others, the metal-catalysis battery systems would develop from metal-Ox, Cx to metal-Nx and other batteries. Then, from Zn-CO2 and Zn-hydrazine batteries, we found that the overall reaction is decoupled into two separate reduction and oxidation reactions via the cathodic discharge and charge processes, and we further extracted the essence of the metal-catalysis battery, namely, the temporal-decouple and spatial-couple (TD-SC) mechanism, which is completely opposite to the conventional temporal couple and spatial decouple in electrochemical water splitting. Based on the TD-SC mechanism, we developed various applications of metal-catalysis batteries for the green and efficient synthesis of fine chemicals by modifying the metal anode and redox-coupled catalysts and electrolytes, including the Li-N2/H2 battery for NH3 synthesis and the organic Li-N2 battery for fine chemical synthesis. Finally, the main challenges and the possible opportunities for the metal-catalysis battery are discussed, including the rational design of highly efficient redox-coupled electrocatalysts and green electrochemical synthesis. The deep insight into the metal-catalysis battery will provide an alternative approach to energy storage and chemical production.

13.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 3639, 2023 Jun 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37336903

ABSTRACT

Stable lithium metal negative electrodes are desirable to produce high-energy batteries. However, when practical testing conditions are applied, lithium metal is unstable during battery cycling. Here, we propose poly(2-hydroxyethyl acrylate-co-sodium benzenesulfonate) (PHS) as negative electrode protective layer. The PHS contains soft poly (2-hydroxyethyl acrylate) and poly(sodium p-styrene sulfonate), which improve electrode flexibility, connection with the Cu current collector and transport of Li ions. Transmission electron cryomicroscopy measurements reveal that PHS induces the formation of a solid electrolyte interphase with a fluorinated rigid and crystalline internal structure. Furthermore, theoretical calculations suggest that the -SO3- group of poly(sodium p-styrene sulfonate) promotes Li-ion motion towards interchain migration through cation-dipole interaction, thus, enabling uniform Li-ion diffusion. Electrochemical measurements of Li | |PHS-coated-Cu coin cells demonstrate an average Coulombic efficiency of 99.46% at 1 mA/cm2, 6 mAh/cm2 and 25 °C. Moreover, when the PHS-coated Li metal negative electrode is paired with a high-areal-capacity LiNi0.83Co0.11Mn0.06O2-based positive electrode in multi-layer pouch cell configuration, the battery delivers an initial capacity of 6.86 Ah (corresponding to a specific energy of 489.7 Wh/kg) and, a 91.1% discharge capacity retention after 150 cycles at 2.5 mA/cm2, 25 °C and 172 kPa.

14.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(30): e202306506, 2023 Jul 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37254704

ABSTRACT

Solar-to-electrochemical energy storage in solar batteries is an important solar utilization technology comparable to solar-to-electricity (solar cells) and solar-to-fuel (photocatalytic cells) conversion. Unlike the indirect approach of integrated solar flow batteries combining photoelectrodes with redox-electrodes, coupled solar batteries enable direct solar energy storage, but are hampered by low efficiency due to rapid charge recombination of materials and misaligned energy levels between electrodes. Herein, we propose a design for a coupled solar battery that intercouples two photo-coupled ion transfer (PCIT) reactions through electron-ion transfer upon co-photo-pumping of photoelectrochemical storage cathode and anode. We used a representative covalent organic framework (COF) to achieve efficient charge separation and directional charge transfer between two band-matched photoelectrochemical storage electrodes, with a photovoltage sufficient for COF dual-redox reactions. By pumping these electrodes, the coupled solar battery stores solar energy via two synergistic PCIT reactions of electron-proton-relayed COF oxidation and reduction, and the stored solar energy is released as electrochemical energy during COF regeneration in discharge while interlocking the loops. A breakthrough in efficiency (6.9 %) was achieved, adaptive to a large-area (56 cm2 ) tandem device. The presented photo-intercoupled electron-ion transfer (PIEIT) mechanism provides expandable paths toward practical solar-to-electrochemical energy storage.

15.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(22): e202302882, 2023 May 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37005221

ABSTRACT

Designing porous materials for C2 H2 purification and safe storage is essential research for industrial utilization. We emphatically regulate the metal-alkyne interaction of PdII and PtII on C2 H2 sorption and C2 H2 /CO2 separation in two isostructural NbO metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), Pd/Cu-PDA and Pt/Cu-PDA. The experimental investigations and systematic theoretical calculations reveal that PdII in Pd/Cu-PDA undergoes spontaneous chemical reaction with C2 H2 , leading to irreversible structural collapse and loss of C2 H2 /CO2 sorption and separation. Contrarily, PtII in Pt/Cu-PDA shows strong di-σ bond interaction with C2 H2 to form specific π-complexation, contributing to high C2 H2 capture (28.7 cm3 g-1 at 0.01 bar and 153 cm3 g-1 at 1 bar). The reusable Pt/Cu-PDA efficiently separates C2 H2 from C2 H2 /CO2 mixtures with satisfying selectivity and C2 H2 capacity (37 min g-1 ). This research provides valuable insight into designing high-performance MOFs for gas sorption and separation.

16.
Nat Rev Chem ; 7(2): 91-105, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37117911

ABSTRACT

Natural photosynthesis is an efficient biochemical process which converts solar energy into energy-rich carbohydrates. By understanding the key photoelectrochemical processes and mechanisms that underpin natural photosynthesis, advanced solar utilization technologies have been developed that may be used to provide sustainable energy to help address climate change. The processes of light harvesting, catalysis and energy storage in natural photosynthesis have inspired photovoltaics, photoelectrocatalysis and photo-rechargeable battery technologies. In this Review, we describe how advanced solar utilization technologies have drawn inspiration from natural photosynthesis, to find sustainable solutions to the challenges faced by modern society. We summarize the uses of advanced solar utilization technologies, such as converting solar energy to electrical and chemical energy, electrochemical storage and conversion, and associated thermal tandem technologies. Both the foundational mechanisms and typical materials and devices are reported. Finally, potential future solar utilization technologies are presented that may mimic, and even outperform, natural photosynthesis.

17.
Adv Mater ; 35(40): e2212078, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36841953

ABSTRACT

New types of electrochemical energy conversion and storage devices based on redox electrocatalytic reactions possess great potential in renewable energy to maximize energy utilization and balance environmental issues. The typical device is the metal-redox bicatalysis battery, where the cathode is redox bifunctional catalyst (named as redox bicatalyst) with gas, solid, liquid as active reactants while anode is metal, driven by cathodic redox electrocatalytic reactions during charge/discharge processes, which promotes the energy storage and chemical production. In this system, the metal anode, redox-bicatalyst cathode, electrolytes, and the redox electrochemical reactions can be modified and adjusted to achieve the optimal energy conversion and utilization. Therefore, the deep understanding of the electrochemical system is conducive to designing new devices to meet the demand among various applications, including energy storage and conversion. In this review, the authors clarify the fundamentals and design principles of the rechargeable/reversible metal-redox bicatalysis batteries and how each part affects the devices in energy conversion and chemical production. The authors summarize the electrocatalytic reduction/oxidation reactions, the reported systems relied on redox reactions, and the corresponding redox bicatalysts. Finally, a perspective of the key challenges and the possible new types of metal-redox bicatalysis batteries for efficient energy utilization and chemical production are given.

18.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(23): e202219076, 2023 Jun 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36847210

ABSTRACT

Natural photosynthesis (NP) generates oxygen and carbohydrates from water and CO2 utilizing solar energy to nourish lives and balance CO2 levels. Following nature, artificial photosynthesis (AP), typically, overall water or CO2 splitting, produces fuels and chemicals from renewable energy. However, hydrogen evolution or CO2 reduction is inherently coupled with kinetically sluggish water oxidation, lowering efficiencies and raising safety concerns. Decoupled systems have thus emerged. In this review, we elaborate how decoupled artificial photosynthesis (DAP) evolves from NP and AP and unveil their distinct photoelectrochemical mechanisms in energy capture, transduction and conversion. Advances of AP and DAP are summarized in terms of photochemical (PC), photoelectrochemical (PEC), and photovoltaic-electrochemical (PV-EC) catalysis based on material and device design. The energy transduction process of DAP is emphasized. Challenges and perspectives on future researches are also presented.

19.
Adv Mater ; 34(51): e2207747, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36189857

ABSTRACT

Hydrogen generation via electrochemical splitting plays an important role to achieve hydrogen economy. However, the large-scale application is highly limited by high cost and low efficiency. Herein, a new type of rechargeable Zn-hydrazine (Zn-Hz) battery is proposed and realized by a bifunctional electrocatalyst based on two separate cathodic reactions of hydrogen evolution (discharge: 2H2 O + 2e-  â†’ H2  + 2OH- ) and hydrazine oxidation (charge: 1 / 2 N 2 H 4 + 2 OH - → 1 / 2 N 2 + 2 H 2 O + 2 e - $1{\rm{/}}2\,{{\rm{N}}_2}{{\rm{H}}_4}{\bm{ + }}2{\rm{O}}{{\rm{H}}^{\bm{ - }}}{\bm{ \to }}1{\rm{/}}2\,{{\rm{N}}_2}{\bm{ + }}2{{\rm{H}}_2}{\rm{O}}{\bm{ + }}2{e^{\bm{ - }}}$ ). This Zn-Hz battery, driven by temporally decoupled electrochemical hydrazine splitting on the cathode during discharge and charge processes, can generate separated hydrogen without purification. When the highly active bifunctional cathode of 3D Mo2 C/Ni@C/CS is paired with Zn foil, the Zn-Hz battery can achieve efficient hydrogen generation with a low energy input of less than 0.4 V (77.2 kJ mol-1 ) and high energy efficiency of 96%. Remarkably, this battery exhibits outstanding long-term stability for 600 cycles (200 h), achieving continuous hydrogen production on demand, which presents great potential for practical application.

20.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(50): e202214816, 2022 Dec 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36280902

ABSTRACT

Photoresponsive batteries promise flexible and low-cost solar-to-electrochemical energy storage (SES), but suffer from a limited SES efficiency due to rapid charge recombination and sluggish redox. Here, we present a porous-shell/core hybrid of covalent organic framework@carbon nanotube. This hybrid ensures long-lived separated charges (τave =3.0 ns) by an electron transfer relay starting from the donor-acceptor molecules to the nanoscale heterojunction. These charges are further allowed to drive high-rate redox of -C=O/-C-O- and -C-N/-C=N+ with facile kinetics. Equipped with this photoelectrochemical cathode, a photoresponsive aqueous battery shows a 5-fold enhancement in SES efficiency (1.1 % at 1 sun) over their counterparts. It is unveiled that the electron relay favors the formation of electron-enriching -C-O- and hole-enriching -C=N+ groups responsible for photoelectrochemical Zn2+ and OTf- storage cascade; and further, the general photo coupled ions transfer (PCIT) process is proposed. This work presents an inspiring photoelectrochemical cathode design and theoretical insight for photoresponsive batteries.

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