Competitive Pi-Stacking and H-Bond Piling Increase Solubility of Heterocyclic Redoxmers
Author(s) -
Yuyue Zhao,
Erik Sarnello,
Lily A. Robertson,
Jingjing Zhang,
Zhangxing Shi,
Yu Zhou,
Sambasiva R. Bheemireddy,
Yang Zhang,
Tao Li,
Rajeev S. Assary,
Lei Cheng,
Zhengcheng Zhang,
Lu Zhang,
Ilya A. Shkrob
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c07647
Subject(s) - solubility , stacking , acetonitrile , molar concentration , molecule , chemistry , electrolyte , nucleation , yield (engineering) , chemical physics , materials science , organic chemistry , composite material , electrode
Redoxmers are organic molecules that carry electric charge in flow batteries. In many instances, they consist of heteroaromatic moieties modified with appended groups to prevent stacking of the planar cores and increase solubility in liquid electrolytes. This higher solubility is desired as it potentially allows achieving greater energy density in the battery. However, the present synthetic strategies often yield bulky molecules with low molarity even when they are neat and still lower molarity in liquid solutions. Fortunately, there are exceptions to this rule. Here, we examine one well-studied redoxmer, 2,1,3-benzothiadiazole, which has solubility ∼5.7 M in acetonitrile at 25 °C. We show computationally and prove experimentally that the competition between two packing motifs, face-to-face π-stacking and random N-H bond piling, introduces frustration that confounds nucleation in crowded solutions. Our findings and examples from related systems suggest a complementary strategy for the molecular design of redoxmers for high energy density redox flow cells.
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