Abstract

Organic cathode materials have recently attracted abundant attention due to their flexible structural tunability and recyclability. However, the low intrinsic electrical conductivity and high solubility in electrolytes of organic electrode materials have significantly limited their practical application. Herein, we present [5,15-bis(ethynyl)-10,20-difurylporphinato] copper(II) (CuDEOP) as a new cathode for rechargeable organic lithium batteries (ROLBs). The combination of both ethynyl and furyl groups of the CuDEOP cathode with a nanorod structure renders it with enhanced structural stability and an extended delocalized π-electron system to deliver excellent cycling stability (capacity retention of 76% after 6000 cycles) and a high power density (16 kW kg-1). The furyl electroactive groups participate in charge storage contribution to achieve a reversible six-electron-transfer redox reaction in a specific voltage range. The mechanism characterizations indicate that the nitrogen atoms on the porphyrin ring act as active sites to alternatively store both PF6- anions and Li+ cations, and the charge storage process is a pseudocapacitive-dominated reaction. This observation will offer a new avenue for designing functionalized molecules for electrochemical energy-storage (EES) systems.

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