Investigation of novel, redox-active organic materials for lithium-ion and lithium-oxygen batteries

This thesis encompasses the successful synthesis, characterization (NMR, IR, TGA) and electrochemical testing of novel, potentially redox-active organic materials. These were destined as electrodes for Li-organic cells and/or as catalysts for Li–O2 cells. The electrochemical performance of the dilit...

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Main Author: Kotronia, Antonia
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Uppsala universitet, Strukturkemi 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-304751
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-uu-3047512016-10-12T05:12:30ZInvestigation of novel, redox-active organic materials for lithium-ion and lithium-oxygen batteriesengKotronia, AntoniaUppsala universitet, Strukturkemi2016lithium-ionlithium-oxygenorganic electrode materialsorganic catalystsThis thesis encompasses the successful synthesis, characterization (NMR, IR, TGA) and electrochemical testing of novel, potentially redox-active organic materials. These were destined as electrodes for Li-organic cells and/or as catalysts for Li–O2 cells. The electrochemical performance of the dilithiated and tetralithiated salts of 2,5-dialkylamide hydroquinones (with ethyl, isopropyl or benzyl as the alkyl group) and of a partially lithiated polymer with a backbone of alternating 2,5-dicarbonylhydroquinone and 1,4-benzyl diaminophenylene units was evaluated. The small organicsalts exhibited redox-activity around 1.0 V vs Li/Li+ (the terephthaloyl redox system) and 2.8 V vs Li/Li+ (the quinone redox system). These values drifted depending on lithiation degree and alkyl substituent. Redox irreversibility featured these materials which decomposed and dissolved. The polymer exhibited multiple redox-activity in the region of 2.5-3.6 V vs Li/Li+, which was however also irreversible. Further on, the small organic salts were tested as to their impact on the dischargeproduct (Li2O2) yield in Li-O2 cells. Discharge profiles of cells with and without the inclusion of the salts were contrasted to each other; the former having a jagged appearance, indicative of side-reactions. The O2 electrode was studied by XRD todetect the formed products and the amount of Li2O2 present was quantified throug htitration and UV-vis spectroscopy. Organic salt inclusion was found to negatively affect the Li2O2 formation and also attack the Li-electrode. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-304751UPTEC Q, 1401-5773 ; 16016application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic lithium-ion
lithium-oxygen
organic electrode materials
organic catalysts
spellingShingle lithium-ion
lithium-oxygen
organic electrode materials
organic catalysts
Kotronia, Antonia
Investigation of novel, redox-active organic materials for lithium-ion and lithium-oxygen batteries
description This thesis encompasses the successful synthesis, characterization (NMR, IR, TGA) and electrochemical testing of novel, potentially redox-active organic materials. These were destined as electrodes for Li-organic cells and/or as catalysts for Li–O2 cells. The electrochemical performance of the dilithiated and tetralithiated salts of 2,5-dialkylamide hydroquinones (with ethyl, isopropyl or benzyl as the alkyl group) and of a partially lithiated polymer with a backbone of alternating 2,5-dicarbonylhydroquinone and 1,4-benzyl diaminophenylene units was evaluated. The small organicsalts exhibited redox-activity around 1.0 V vs Li/Li+ (the terephthaloyl redox system) and 2.8 V vs Li/Li+ (the quinone redox system). These values drifted depending on lithiation degree and alkyl substituent. Redox irreversibility featured these materials which decomposed and dissolved. The polymer exhibited multiple redox-activity in the region of 2.5-3.6 V vs Li/Li+, which was however also irreversible. Further on, the small organic salts were tested as to their impact on the dischargeproduct (Li2O2) yield in Li-O2 cells. Discharge profiles of cells with and without the inclusion of the salts were contrasted to each other; the former having a jagged appearance, indicative of side-reactions. The O2 electrode was studied by XRD todetect the formed products and the amount of Li2O2 present was quantified throug htitration and UV-vis spectroscopy. Organic salt inclusion was found to negatively affect the Li2O2 formation and also attack the Li-electrode.
author Kotronia, Antonia
author_facet Kotronia, Antonia
author_sort Kotronia, Antonia
title Investigation of novel, redox-active organic materials for lithium-ion and lithium-oxygen batteries
title_short Investigation of novel, redox-active organic materials for lithium-ion and lithium-oxygen batteries
title_full Investigation of novel, redox-active organic materials for lithium-ion and lithium-oxygen batteries
title_fullStr Investigation of novel, redox-active organic materials for lithium-ion and lithium-oxygen batteries
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of novel, redox-active organic materials for lithium-ion and lithium-oxygen batteries
title_sort investigation of novel, redox-active organic materials for lithium-ion and lithium-oxygen batteries
publisher Uppsala universitet, Strukturkemi
publishDate 2016
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-304751
work_keys_str_mv AT kotroniaantonia investigationofnovelredoxactiveorganicmaterialsforlithiumionandlithiumoxygenbatteries
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