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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

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

Kotronia, Antonia January 2016 (has links)
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.
2

Conducting redox polymers for battery applications

Svensson, Mikael January 2020 (has links)
The near future will put a lot of demand on the increasing need for energy production and storage. Issues regarding the modern-day battery technology’s environmental benignity, safety and cost to sustain such demands thus serve as a huge bottleneck, necessitating the research into alternative electrochemical energy storage solutions. Conducting redox polymers are a class of materials which combines the concepts of conducting polymers and redox active molecules to work as fully organic electrode materials. In this work three conducting redox polymers based on 3,4-ethylenedioxythiopene and 3,4-propylenedioxythiopene (EPE) with hydroquinone, catechol and quinizarin pendant groups were investigated. The polymers were electrochemically characterized with regards to their ability to cycle protons (aqueous electrolyte) and cations (non-aqueous electrolyte), their kinetics and charge transport and as cathodes in a battery. In non-aqueous electrolyte, hydroquinone and catechol did not exhibit redox activity in a potential region where the backbone was conducting as they were not redoxmatched. Quinizarin showed redox-matching as concluded by in situ conductance and UV-vis measurements when cycling Na+, Li+, Ca2+ and Mg2+-ions in acetonitrile. Comparison of the kinetics revealed that the rate constant for Ca2+-ion cycling was several magnitudes larger than the rest, and galvanostatic charge/discharge showed that 90% of the polymer capacity was attainable at 5C. An EPE-Quinizarin cathode and metallic calcium anode coin cell assembly displayed output voltages of 2.4 V, and the presented material thus shows promising and exciting properties for future sustainable battery chemistries.
3

Design Guidelines for Organic Electrode Materials in Advanced Energy Storage Systems

Tuttle, Madison R. 12 September 2022 (has links)
No description available.

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