Nature Communications (Jun 2023)

Energy conversion and storage via photoinduced polarization change in non-ferroelectric molecular [CoGa] crystals

  • Pritam Sadhukhan,
  • Shu-Qi Wu,
  • Shinji Kanegawa,
  • Sheng-Qun Su,
  • Xiaopeng Zhang,
  • Takumi Nakanishi,
  • Jeremy Ian Long,
  • Kaige Gao,
  • Rintaro Shimada,
  • Hajime Okajima,
  • Akira Sakamoto,
  • Joy G. Chiappella,
  • Myron S. Huzan,
  • Thomas Kroll,
  • Dimosthenis Sokaras,
  • Michael L. Baker,
  • Osamu Sato

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-39127-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract To alleviate the energy and environmental crisis, in the last decades, energy harvesting by utilizing optical control has emerged as a promising solution. Here we report a polar crystal that exhibits photoenergy conversion and energy storage upon light irradiation. The polar crystal consists of dinuclear [CoGa] molecules, which are oriented in a uniform direction inside the crystal lattice. Irradiation with green light induces a directional intramolecular electron transfer from the ligand to a low-spin CoIII centre, and the resultant light-induced high-spin CoII excited state is trapped at low temperature, realizing energy storage. Additionally, electric current release is observed during relaxation from the trapped light-induced metastable state to the ground state, because the intramolecular electron transfer in the relaxation process is accompanied with macroscopic polarization switching at the single-crystal level. It demonstrates that energy storage and conversion to electrical energy is realized in the [CoGa] crystals, which is different from typical polar pyroelectric compounds that exhibit the conversion of thermal energy into electricity.