Relationship between Molecular Structure and Electron
Transfer in a Polymeric Nitroxyl-Radical Energy Storage Material
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Abstract
In recent years, stable organic radical
functional groups have
been incorporated into a variety of polymeric materials for use as
electrodes within energy storage devices, for example, batteries and
capacitors. With the complex nature of the charge-transfer processes
in a polymer matrix, the morphologies of the polymer films can have
a significant impact on the redox behavior of the organic-based radical.
To elucidate possible effects of packing on electron-transport mechanisms,
theoretical modeling of the well-characterized cathode material poly(2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidinyloxy
methacrylate) (PTMA) was conducted. Polymer morphologies were modeled
using classical molecular dynamics simulations, and subsequently,
the electronic-coupling matrix element between each radical site was
calculated. Building on a previously derived treatment of diffusion
in inhomogeneous materials, an expression for an effective electron
diffusion length and an effective electron diffusion rate was derived
in terms of an electronic-coupling-weighted radial distribution function.
Two primary distances were found to contribute to the effective electron
transfer length of 5.5 Å with a majority of the electron transfer,
nearly 85%, occurring between radical sites on different polymer chains.
Finally, we point out that this analysis of charge transfer using
an electronic-coupling-weighted radial distribution function has application
beyond the specific system addressed here and that it may prove useful
more generally for simulating electron-transfer processes in disordered
molecular materials