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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 19, 2025
  2. Pseudocapacitors offer a unique strategy to combine the rapid charging rates of capacitors with the high energy density of batteries, potentially offering a unique solution to energy storage challenges. Bending and twisting aromatic building blocks to form contorted aromatics have emerged as a new strategy to create organic materials with unique and tunable properties. This paper studies the union between these two concepts: molecular contortion and organic pseudocapacitors. The recent development of fully organic pseudocapacitors, including high-performing devices based on perylene diimide organic redox units, introduces the added benefit of low cost, synthetic tunability, and increased flexibility. We synthesize a series of polymers by joining perylene diimide with various linkers that incorporate a helical moiety from [4]helicene to [6]helicene into the molecular backbone. We prepare three new electroactive polymers that incorporate benzene, naphthalene, and anthracene linkers and study their pseudocapacitive performance to infer key design principles for organic pseudocapacitors. Our results show that the naphthalene linker results in the most strongly coupled redox centers and displays the highest pseudocapacitance of 292 ± 47 F/g at 0.5 A/g. To understand the pseudocapacitive behavior, we synthesized dimer model compounds to further probe the electronic structure of these materials through electronic absorption spectroscopy and first-principles calculations. Our results suggest that the identity of the aromatic linker influences the contortion between neighboring perylene diimide units, the coupling between redox centers, and their relative angles and distances. We find that competing molecular design factors must be carefully optimized to generate high-performance devices. Overall, this study provides key insights into molecular design strategies for generating high-performing organic pseudocapacitor materials. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 14, 2025
  3. Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 12, 2025
  4. The formation of carbon–carbon bonds with transition metal reagents serves as a cornerstone of organic synthesis. Here, we show that the reactivity of an otherwise kinetically inert transition metal complex can be induced by an external electric field to affect a coupling reaction. These results highlight the importance of electric field effects in reaction chemistry and offers a new strategy to modulate organometallic reactivity. 
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  5. Synthesis and isolation of molecular building blocks of metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) can provide unique opportunities for characterization that would otherwise be inaccessible due to the heterogeneous nature of MOFs. Herein, we report a series of trinuclear cobalt complexes incorporating dithiolene ligands, triphenylene-2,3,6,7,10,11-hexathiolate (THT) (13+), and benzene hexathiolate (BHT) (23+), with 1,1,1,-tris(diphenylphosphinomethyl)ethane (triphos) employed as the capping ligand. Single crystal X-ray analyses of 13+ and 23+ display three five-coordinate cobalt centers bound to the triphos and dithiolene ligands in a distorted square pyramidal geometry. Cyclic voltammetry studies of 13+ and 23+ reveal three redox features associated with the formation of mixed valence states due to the sequential reduction of the redox-active metal centers (Co III/II ). Using this electrochemical data, the comproportionality values were determined for 1 and 2 (log  K c = 1.4 and 1.5 for 1, and 4.7 and 5.8 for 2), suggesting strong resonance-stabilized coupling of the metal centers, with stronger electronic coupling observed for complex 2 compared to that for complex 1. Cyclic voltammetry studies were also performed in solvents of varying polarity, whereupon the difference in the standard potentials (Δ E 1/2 ) for 1 and 2 was found to shift as a function of the polarity of the solvent, indicating a negative correlation between the dielectric constant of the electrochemical medium and the stability of the mixed valence species. Spectroelectrochemical studies of in situ generated multi-valent (MV) states of complexes 1 and 2 display characteristic NIR intervalence charge transfer (IVCT) bands, and analysis of the IVCT transitions for complex 2 suggests a weakly coupled class II multi-valent species and relatively large electronic coupling factors (1700 cm −1 for the first multi-valent state of 22+, and 1400 and 4000 cm −1 for the second multi-valent state of 2+). Density functional theory (DFT) calculations indicate a significant deviation in relative energies of the frontier orbitals of complexes 13+, 23+, and 3+ that contrasts those calculated for the analogous trinuclear cobalt dithiolene complexes employing pentamethylcyclopentadienyl (Cp*) as the capping ligand (Co3Cp*3THT and Co3Cp*3BHT, respectively), and may be a result of the cationic nature of complexes 13+, 23+, and 3+. 
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