Optimizing polyoxometalate electrodes for energy storage via cation design and thermal activation

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Chemistry Europe
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Polyoxometalates (POM) are promising materials for electrochemical applications, such as supercapacitors. However, their stability in aqueous electrolytes is compromised due to POM cluster leaching. To mitigate this issue, POM can be combined with organic counter cations, which reduce their solubility in water and influence interactions with carbon support materials. Nevertheless, further research is needed to determine the optimal characteristics and electrode design for maximizing performance. In this work, a synergistic methodology to investigate POM compounds bearing cations with three core functionalities (ammonium, imidazolium, and pyridinium) and varying alkyl side chain lengths, is developed in order to elucidate and optimize the effects of hydrophobicity on the structure of organic–inorganic hybrid materials, electrode films, and their electrochemical performance. The results show that, although cations with long alkyl chains exhibit lower capacitance, they can be activated through molecular rearrangement in the solid state, facilitated by the flexibility of these chains within the structure. By combining thermal and electrochemical techniques, the electrode materials are optimized. These findings demonstrate that the careful selection of counter-cations with the appropriate molecular structures, followed by a thermal activation protocol, is key to developing more efficient and durable energy storage systems

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Vizcaíno-Anaya, L., Giner-Rajala, Ó., Herreros-Lucas, C., Rodríguez, H., & Giménez-López, M. del C. (2025). Front Cover: Optimizing polyoxometalate electrodes for energy storage via cation design and thermal activation. Chemistry–Methods, 5(9), e202500046. https://doi.org/10.1002/cmtd.202500046

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This work received financial support from the Ministry of Science of Spain (PID2021-127341OB-I00, TED2021-131451B-C21, and PDC2022-133925-I00 for M.d.C.G.-L.), the European Research Council (ERC) [Starting Grant (NANOCOMP-679124) and ZABCAT (966743) for M.d.C.G.-L.], the Xunta de Galicia (Centro Singular de Investigación de Galicia accreditation 2023–2027, ED431G 2023/03; ED431C 2024/05, the Oportunius Research Professor Program (Gain) for M.d.C.G.-L. and ED431B 2023/22 for H.R.), and the European Union (European Regional Development FundERDF for M.d.C.G.-L.). L.V.-A. acknowledges the Ministry of Universities of Spain for her predoctoral fellowship FPU20/01072.

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© 2025 The Author(s). This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License