Publication | Closed Access
Fe-Based Coordination Polymers as Battery-Type Electrodes in Semi-Solid-State Battery–Supercapacitor Hybrid Devices
178
Citations
45
References
2021
Year
One two-dimensional Fe-based metal-organic framework (FeSC1) and one one-dimensional coordination polymer (FeSC2) have been solvothermally prepared through the reaction among FeSO<sub>4</sub>·7H<sub>2</sub>O, the tripodal ligand 4,4',4″-<i>s</i>-triazine-2,4,6-triyl-tribenzoate (H<sub>3</sub>TATB), and flexible secondary building blocks p/m-bis((1H-imidazole-1-yl)methyl)benzene (bib). Given that their abundant interlayer spaces and different coordination modes, two compounds have been employed as battery-type electrodes to understand how void space and different coordination modes affect their performances in three-electrode electrochemical systems. Both materials exhibit outstanding but different electrochemical performances (including distinct capacities and charge-transfer abilities) under three-electrode configurations, where the charge storage for each electrode material is mainly dominated by the diffusion-controlled section (<i>i</i> ∝ <i>v</i><sup>0.5</sup>) through power-law equations. Additionally, the partial phase transformations to more stable FeOOH are also detected in the long-term cycling loops. After coupling with the capacitive carbon-based electrode to assemble into the semi-solid-state battery-supercapacitor-hybrid (sss-BSH) devices, the sss-FeSC1//AC BSH device delivers excellent capacitance, superior energy and power density, and longstanding endurance as well as the potential practical property.
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