Structure–property relationship in phenothiazine-based hypercrosslinked organic electrode materials through porosity adjustment

Abstract

A series of phenothiazine-based hypercrosslinked p-type porous polymers were synthesized via a knitting polymerization method, incorporating increasing amounts of benzene as a co-monomer for a systematic observation of the porosity–electrochemical performance relationship. The resulting materials, denoted as IEP-29, IEP-29-b/4, IEP-29-b/2, and IEP-29-b, correspond to PTz/benzene ratios of 1/0, 1/0.25, 1/0.5, and 1/1, respectively. The inclusion of benzene, acting as a structure directing co-monomer, significantly increased the crosslinking density and accessible surface areas, which varied from 29 m2 g−1 (IEP-29, no benzene) to 586 m2 g−1 (IEP-29-b, 1/1 ratio). However, this also resulted in reduced theoretical capacity, which decreased from 112 mA h g−1 (IEP-29) to 70 mA h g−1 (IEP-29-b), due to the incorporation of non-electrochemically active benzene units. Electrochemical testing in Li-cells revealed that increased crosslinking improved capacity utilization and high-rate capability, despite a moderate decline in gravimetric capacity. This study further explored the effect of increasing electrode mass loading (up to 50 mg cm−2) on electrochemical performance. Remarkably, IEP-29-b, the most crosslinked analogue, exhibited near-linear areal capacity scaling with minimal loss in gravimetric capacity as mass loading increased. At 50 mg cm−2, it achieved 3.5 mA h cm−2 along with excellent rate performance and cycling stability, retaining 71% of its capacity after 500 cycles at 2C. Importantly, the moderately crosslinked analogue (IEP-29-b/4) offered an optimal balance between specific gravimetric and areal capacities, delivering record-high values of 72.9 mA h g−1 (based on the total mass of the electrode) and 3.85 mA h cm−2, respectively – among the highest reported for p-type polymer cathodes in lithium cells. This work presents a cost-effective, scalable route to develop crosslinked, porous p-type hyperbranched polymers as high-performance cathodes with enhanced electrochemical properties at both the material and electrode levels. Therefore, this strategy paves the way for more commercially viable, high-capacity energy storage solutions.

Graphical abstract: Structure–property relationship in phenothiazine-based hypercrosslinked organic electrode materials through porosity adjustment

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Jun 2025
Accepted
20 Aug 2025
First published
24 Sep 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2025, Advance Article

Structure–property relationship in phenothiazine-based hypercrosslinked organic electrode materials through porosity adjustment

H. Bildirir, N. Patil, S. Pinilla, M. Liras and R. Marcilla, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5TA04431F

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