Hydrogen-bonding
organic acid–base salts are promising candidates
for the chemical design of high-performance anhydrous proton conductors.
The simple molecular crystals between the π-planar molecules
of 2,2′-diaminobithiazolium (DABT) derivative and hydrogen-bonding
H3PO4 formed the proton-transferred salts with
proton conductivities above ∼10–4 S cm–1 and anisotropic behavior. Controlling the crystallization
condition facilitated the formation of binary salts between di-cationic
H2DABT2+ and (H3PO4–)2 or mixed proton-transferred (H2PO4–)2(H3PO4)2 with different hydrogen-bonding networks, including one-dimensional
(1D), two-dimensional (2D), and three-dimensional (3D) networks. The
structural isomers of 2,2′-diamino-4,4′-bithiazolium
(2,4-DABT) and 2,2′-diamino-5,5′-bithiazolium (2,5-DABT)
formed a different type of packing structure even with the same crystal
stoichiometry of (H2DABT2+)(H2PO4–)2 and/or (H2DABT2+)(H2PO4–)2(H3PO4)2 where the latter
salt had different protonated species of H2PO4– and H3PO4 in the hydrogen-bonding
network. Four and 10 protons per H2DABT2+ molecule
(H+: carrier concentration) were present in the (H2DABT2+)(H2PO4–)2 and (H2DABT2+)(H2PO4–)2(H3PO4)2 salts, respectively, which accounted for the
highly proton-conducting behavior in the latter mixed protonated crystal.
To design anhydrous intrinsic H+ conductors, both the mixed
proton transfer state and uniform O–H···O
hydrogen-bonding interaction are essential factors that must be considered