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Advanced supercapacitor electrodes require the development of materials with dense redox sites embedded into conductive and porous skeletons. Two-dimensional (2D) conjugated metal–organic frameworks (c-MOFs) are attractive supercapacitor electrode materials due to their high intrinsic electrical conductivities, large specific surface areas, and quasi-one-dimensional aligned pore arrays. However, the reported 2D c-MOFs still suffer from unsatisfying specific capacitances and narrow potential windows because large and redox-inactive building blocks lead to low redox-site densities of 2D c-MOFs. Herein, we demonstrate the dual-redox-site 2D c-MOFs with copper phthalocyanine building blocks linked by metal-bis(iminobenzosemiquinoid) (M2CuPc(NH)8, M = Ni or Cu), which depict both large specific capacitances and wide potential windows. Experimental results accompanied by theoretical calculations verify that phthalocyanine monomers and metal-bis(iminobenzosemiquinoid) linkages serve as respective redox sites for pseudocapacitive cation (Na+) and anion (SO42–) storage, enabling the continuous Faradaic reactions of M2CuPc(NH)8 occurring in a large potential window of −0.8 to 0.8 V vs Ag/AgCl (3 M KCl). The decent conductivity (0.8 S m–1) and high active-site density further endow the Ni2CuPc(NH)8 with a remarkable specific capacitance (400 F g–1 at 0.5 A g–1) and excellent rate capability (183 F g–1 at 20 A g–1). Quasi-solid-state symmetric supercapacitors are further assembled to demonstrate the practical application of Ni2CuPc(NH)8 electrode, which deliver a state-of-the-art energy density of 51.6 Wh kg–1 and a peak power density of 32.1 kW kg–1.
Zhang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.