Istituto di Cristallografia - CNR

Mechanistic Understanding of the Interactions and Pseudocapacitance of Multi-Electron Redox Organic Molecules Sandwiched between MXene Layers

Using a combined theoretical and experimental approach, a mechanistic
understanding of the interactions and pseudocapacitance of different quinone-
coupled viologen and pyridiniumium molecules sandwiched between
titanium carbide (Ti3C2Tx) MXene layers has been provided. Three different
derivatives of quinone-coupled viologen and pyridiniumium are synthesized
using nucleophilic substitution reaction and subsequently hybridized with
Ti3C2Tx MXene (organic@Ti3C2Tx) using self-assembly approach. The atomic
structure of pristine Ti3C2Tx and organic@Ti3C2Tx hybrid films is investigated
using grazing incidence X-ray diffraction and X-ray pair distribution function
analysis using synchrotron radiation. Spectroscopic results confirm the
coupling of quinones with viologen and pyridiniumium molecules and their
non-covalent functionalization to the MXene without their catalytic decomposition.
First-principles calculations confirm that the preferred orientation of
organic molecules upon intercalation/adsorption is horizontal to the Ti3C2Tx
surface. The authors reveal that these molecules attach to the Ti3C2Tx surface
with a significantly high binding energy (up to -2.77 eV) via a charge transfer
mechanism. The electronic structure calculations show that all organic@
Ti3C2Tx hybrids preserved their metallic behavior. Free-standing organic@
Ti3C2Tx hybrid films show a more than three times higher capacitance at ultrahigh
scan rates (up to 20 V s-1) compared to their pristine counterpart due
to molecular pillaring of organic molecules between Ti3C2Tx layers via strong
binding energies and charge transfer.

Anno
2021
Rivista
Advanced Electronic Materials
Impact factor
7.633
AMBITI DI RICERCA
KEYWORDS
Autori
Muhammad Boota,* Tanveer Hussain, Long Yang, Matthieu Bécuwe, William Porzio, Luisa Barba, and Rajeev Ahuja
Autori IC CNR