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Understanding Solid-State Photochemical Energy Storage in Polymers with Azobenzene Side Groups

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Understanding Solid-State Photochemical Energy Storage in Polymers with Azobenzene Side Groups. / Wallace, Callum; Griffiths, Kieran; Dale, Benjamin L. et al.
In: ACS applied materials & interfaces, Vol. 15, No. 26, 05.07.2023, p. 31787-31794.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Wallace, C, Griffiths, K, Dale, BL, Roberts, S, Parsons, J, Griffin, JM & Görtz, V 2023, 'Understanding Solid-State Photochemical Energy Storage in Polymers with Azobenzene Side Groups', ACS applied materials & interfaces, vol. 15, no. 26, pp. 31787-31794. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c04631

APA

Wallace, C., Griffiths, K., Dale, B. L., Roberts, S., Parsons, J., Griffin, J. M., & Görtz, V. (2023). Understanding Solid-State Photochemical Energy Storage in Polymers with Azobenzene Side Groups. ACS applied materials & interfaces, 15(26), 31787-31794. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c04631

Vancouver

Wallace C, Griffiths K, Dale BL, Roberts S, Parsons J, Griffin JM et al. Understanding Solid-State Photochemical Energy Storage in Polymers with Azobenzene Side Groups. ACS applied materials & interfaces. 2023 Jul 5;15(26):31787-31794. Epub 2023 Jun 23. doi: 10.1021/acsami.3c04631

Author

Wallace, Callum ; Griffiths, Kieran ; Dale, Benjamin L. et al. / Understanding Solid-State Photochemical Energy Storage in Polymers with Azobenzene Side Groups. In: ACS applied materials & interfaces. 2023 ; Vol. 15, No. 26. pp. 31787-31794.

Bibtex

@article{b25e292129d64f3a9e72eec634b3fc34,
title = "Understanding Solid-State Photochemical Energy Storage in Polymers with Azobenzene Side Groups",
abstract = "Solar thermal fuel (STF) materials store energy through light-induced changes in the structures of photoactive molecular groups, and the stored energy is released as heat when the system undergoes reconversion to the ground-state structure. Solid-state STF devices could be useful for a range of applications; however, the light-induced structural changes required for energy storage are often limited or prevented by dense molecular packing in condensed phases. Recently, polymers have been proposed as effective solid-state STF platforms, as they can offer the bulk properties of solid materials while retaining the molecular-level free volume and/or mobility to enable local structural changes in photoresponsive groups. Light-induced energy storage and macroscopic heat release have been demonstrated for polymers with photoisomerizable azobenzene side groups. However, the mechanism of energy storage and the link between the polymer structure, energy density and storage duration has not yet been explored in detail. In this work, we present a systematic study of methacrylate- and acrylate-based polymers with azobenzene side groups to establish the mechanism of energy storage and release and the factors affecting energy density and reconversion kinetics. For polymers with directly attached azobenzene side groups, the energy storage properties are in line with previous work on similar systems, and the photoisomerization and reconversion properties of the azobenzene side groups mirror those of molecular azobenzene. However, the inclusion of an alkyl linker between the azobenzene side group and the backbone significantly increases the photoswitching efficiency, giving almost quantitative conversion to the Z isomeric state. The presence of the alkyl linker also reduces the glass transition temperature and leads to faster spontaneous thermal reconversion to the E isomeric form, but in all cases, half-lives of more than 4 days are observed in the solid state, which provides scope for applications requiring daily energy storage–release cycles. The maximum gravimetric energy density observed is 143 J g–1, which represents an increase of up to 44% compared to polymers with directly attached azobenzene moieties.",
keywords = "General Materials Science",
author = "Callum Wallace and Kieran Griffiths and Dale, {Benjamin L.} and Stuart Roberts and Jonathan Parsons and Griffin, {John M.} and Verena G{\"o}rtz",
year = "2023",
month = jul,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1021/acsami.3c04631",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "31787--31794",
journal = "ACS applied materials & interfaces",
issn = "1944-8244",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "26",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Understanding Solid-State Photochemical Energy Storage in Polymers with Azobenzene Side Groups

AU - Wallace, Callum

AU - Griffiths, Kieran

AU - Dale, Benjamin L.

AU - Roberts, Stuart

AU - Parsons, Jonathan

AU - Griffin, John M.

AU - Görtz, Verena

PY - 2023/7/5

Y1 - 2023/7/5

N2 - Solar thermal fuel (STF) materials store energy through light-induced changes in the structures of photoactive molecular groups, and the stored energy is released as heat when the system undergoes reconversion to the ground-state structure. Solid-state STF devices could be useful for a range of applications; however, the light-induced structural changes required for energy storage are often limited or prevented by dense molecular packing in condensed phases. Recently, polymers have been proposed as effective solid-state STF platforms, as they can offer the bulk properties of solid materials while retaining the molecular-level free volume and/or mobility to enable local structural changes in photoresponsive groups. Light-induced energy storage and macroscopic heat release have been demonstrated for polymers with photoisomerizable azobenzene side groups. However, the mechanism of energy storage and the link between the polymer structure, energy density and storage duration has not yet been explored in detail. In this work, we present a systematic study of methacrylate- and acrylate-based polymers with azobenzene side groups to establish the mechanism of energy storage and release and the factors affecting energy density and reconversion kinetics. For polymers with directly attached azobenzene side groups, the energy storage properties are in line with previous work on similar systems, and the photoisomerization and reconversion properties of the azobenzene side groups mirror those of molecular azobenzene. However, the inclusion of an alkyl linker between the azobenzene side group and the backbone significantly increases the photoswitching efficiency, giving almost quantitative conversion to the Z isomeric state. The presence of the alkyl linker also reduces the glass transition temperature and leads to faster spontaneous thermal reconversion to the E isomeric form, but in all cases, half-lives of more than 4 days are observed in the solid state, which provides scope for applications requiring daily energy storage–release cycles. The maximum gravimetric energy density observed is 143 J g–1, which represents an increase of up to 44% compared to polymers with directly attached azobenzene moieties.

AB - Solar thermal fuel (STF) materials store energy through light-induced changes in the structures of photoactive molecular groups, and the stored energy is released as heat when the system undergoes reconversion to the ground-state structure. Solid-state STF devices could be useful for a range of applications; however, the light-induced structural changes required for energy storage are often limited or prevented by dense molecular packing in condensed phases. Recently, polymers have been proposed as effective solid-state STF platforms, as they can offer the bulk properties of solid materials while retaining the molecular-level free volume and/or mobility to enable local structural changes in photoresponsive groups. Light-induced energy storage and macroscopic heat release have been demonstrated for polymers with photoisomerizable azobenzene side groups. However, the mechanism of energy storage and the link between the polymer structure, energy density and storage duration has not yet been explored in detail. In this work, we present a systematic study of methacrylate- and acrylate-based polymers with azobenzene side groups to establish the mechanism of energy storage and release and the factors affecting energy density and reconversion kinetics. For polymers with directly attached azobenzene side groups, the energy storage properties are in line with previous work on similar systems, and the photoisomerization and reconversion properties of the azobenzene side groups mirror those of molecular azobenzene. However, the inclusion of an alkyl linker between the azobenzene side group and the backbone significantly increases the photoswitching efficiency, giving almost quantitative conversion to the Z isomeric state. The presence of the alkyl linker also reduces the glass transition temperature and leads to faster spontaneous thermal reconversion to the E isomeric form, but in all cases, half-lives of more than 4 days are observed in the solid state, which provides scope for applications requiring daily energy storage–release cycles. The maximum gravimetric energy density observed is 143 J g–1, which represents an increase of up to 44% compared to polymers with directly attached azobenzene moieties.

KW - General Materials Science

U2 - 10.1021/acsami.3c04631

DO - 10.1021/acsami.3c04631

M3 - Journal article

VL - 15

SP - 31787

EP - 31794

JO - ACS applied materials & interfaces

JF - ACS applied materials & interfaces

SN - 1944-8244

IS - 26

ER -