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Creators/Authors contains: "Toney, Michael_F"

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  1. Aminopolycarboxylate chelates are emerging as a promising class of electrolyte materials for aqueous redox flow batteries, offering tunable redox potentials, solubility, and pH stability through careful selection of ligands and transition metal ions. Despite their potential, the impact of molecular structure modifications on the electronic and electrochemical properties of these chelates remains underexplored. Here, we examine how introducing a hydroxyl group, often employed for its solubilizing properties, to the backbone of CrPDTA, a reference chelate material, significantly changes the thermodynamics and kinetics of the chelate's redox process. We correlate changes in molecular and electronic structures to different electrochemical responses resulting from the hydroxyl addition and show that the introduction of this functional group leads to a distortion in the octahedral coordination of chromium. Furthermore, increased anisotropic spin density and nonintegral oxidation state changes in the Cr metal center result in a larger barrier for electron transfer in CrPDTA‐OH. It is demonstrated that preserving a hexacoordinate chelate structure across a broad pH range is crucial for efficient flow battery application and it is emphasized that ligand modifications must avoid distorting the octahedral coordination of the transition metal. 
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  2. Abstract The structure and packing of organic mixed ionic–electronic conductors have an especially significant effect on transport properties. In operating devices, this structure is not fixed but is responsive to changes in electrochemical potential, ion intercalation, and solvent swelling. Toward this end, the steady‐state and transient structure of the model organic mixed conductor, poly(3,4‐ethylenedioxythiophene) polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT:PSS), is characterized using multimodal time‐resolved operando techniques. Steady‐state operando X‐ray scattering reveals a doping‐induced lamellar expansion of 1.6 Å followed by 0.4 Å relaxation at high doping levels. Time‐resolved operando X‐ray scattering reveals asymmetric rates of lamellar structural change during doping and dedoping that do not directly depend on potential or charging transients. Time‐resolved spectroscopy establishes a link between structural transients and the complex kinetics of electronic charge carrier subpopulations, in particular the polaron–bipolaron equilibrium. These findings provide insight into the factors limiting the response time of organic mixed‐conductor‐based devices, and present the first real‐time observation of the structural changes during doping and dedoping of a conjugated polymer system via X‐ray scattering. 
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