Porous crystalline materials such as covalent organic frameworks and metal–organic frameworks have garnered considerable attention as promising ion conducting media. However, most of them additionally incorporate lithium salts and/or solvents inside the pores of frameworks, thus failing to realize solid-state single lithium-ion conduction behavior. Herein, we demonstrate a lithium sulfonated covalent organic framework (denoted as TpPa-SO 3 Li) as a new class of solvent-free, single lithium-ion conductors. Benefiting from well-designed directional ion channels, a high number density of lithium-ions, and covalently tethered anion groups, TpPa-SO 3 Li exhibits an ionic conductivity of 2.7 × 10–5 S cm–1 with a lithium-ion transference number of 0.9 at room temperature and an activation energy of 0.18 eV without additionally incorporating lithium salts and organic solvents. Such unusual ion transport phenomena of TpPa-SO 3 Li allow reversible and stable lithium plating/stripping on lithium metal electrodes, demonstrating its potential use for lithium metal electrodes.
VSTx1 is a voltage sensor toxin from the spider Grammostola spatulata that inhibits KvAP, an archeabacterial voltage-activated K(+) channel whose X-ray structure has been reported. Although the receptor for VSTx1 and the mechanism of inhibition are unknown, the sequence of the toxin is related to hanatoxin (HaTx) and SGTx, two toxins that inhibit eukaryotic voltage-activated K(+) channels by binding to voltage sensors. VSTx1 has been recently shown to interact equally well with lipid membranes that contain zwitterionic or acidic phospholipids, and it has been proposed that the toxin receptor is located within a region of the channel that is submerged in the membrane. As a first step toward understanding the inhibitory mechanism of VSTx1, we determined the three-dimensional solution structure of the toxin using NMR. Although the structure of VSTx1 is similar to HaTx and SGTx in terms of molecular fold and amphipathic character, the detailed positions of hydrophobic and surrounding charged residues in VSTx1 are very different than what is seen in the other toxins. The amphipathic character of VSTx1, notably the close apposition of basic and hydrophobic residues on one face of the toxin, raises the possibility that the toxin interacts with interfacial regions of the membrane. We reinvestigated the partitioning of VSTx1 into lipid membranes and find that VSTx1 partitioning requires negatively charged phospholipids. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence and acrylamide quenching experiments suggest that tryptophan residues on the hydrophobic surface of VSTx1 have a diminished exposure to water when the toxin interacts with membranes. The present results suggest that if membrane partitioning is involved in the mechanism by which VSTx1 inhibits voltage-activated K(+) channels, then binding of the toxin to the channel would likely occur at the interface between the polar headgroups and the hydrophobic phase of the membrane.
The hierarchical porous structure has garnered considerable attention as a multiscale engineering strategy to bring unforeseen synergistic effects in a vast variety of functional materials. Here, we demonstrate a "microporous covalent organic framework (COF) net on mesoporous carbon nanotube (CNT) net" hybrid architecture as a new class of molecularly designed, hierarchical porous chemical trap for lithium polysulfides (Li2Sx) in Li-S batteries. As a proof of concept for the hybrid architecture, self-standing COF-net on CNT-net interlayers (called "NN interlayers") are fabricated through CNT-templated in situ COF synthesis and then inserted between sulfur cathodes and separators. Two COFs with different micropore sizes (COF-1 (0.7 nm) and COF-5 (2.7 nm)) are chosen as model systems. The effects of the pore size and (boron-mediated) chemical affinity of microporous COF nets on Li2Sx adsorption phenomena are theoretically investigated through density functional theory calculations. Benefiting from the chemical/structural uniqueness, the NN interlayers effectively capture Li2Sx without impairing their ion/electron conduction. Notably, the COF-1 NN interlayer, driven by the well-designed microporous structure, allows for the selective deposition/dissolution (i.e., facile solid-liquid conversion) of electrically inert Li2S. As a consequence, the COF-1 NN interlayer provides a significant improvement in the electrochemical performance of Li-S cells (capacity retention after 300 cycles (at charge/discharge rate = 2.0 C/2.0 C) = 84% versus 15% for a control cell with no interlayer) that lies far beyond those accessible with conventional Li-S technologies.
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