Publication: A Phosphonate‐Functionalized Quinone Redox Flow Battery at Near‐Neutral pH with Record Capacity Retention Rate
Open/View Files
Date
2019-02-06
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.
Citation
Ji, Yunlong, Goulet, Marc‐Antoni, Pollack, Daniel A, Kwabi, David G, Jin, Shijian, Porcellinis, Diana, Kerr, Emily F, Gordon, Roy G, and Aziz, Michael J. "A Phosphonate‐Functionalized Quinone Redox Flow Battery at Near‐Neutral PH with Record Capacity Retention Rate." Advanced Energy Materials 9, no. 12 (2019): 1900039-N/a.
Research Data
Abstract
A highly stable phosphonate‐functionalized anthraquinone is introduced as the redox‐active material in a negative potential electrolyte (negolyte) for aqueous redox flow batteries operating at nearly neutral pH. The design and synthesis of 2,6‐DPPEAQ, (((9,10‐dioxo‐9,10‐dihydroanthracene‐2,6‐diyl)bis(oxy))bis(propane‐3,1‐diyl))bis(phosphonic acid), which has a high solubility at pH 9 and above, is described. Chemical stability studies demonstrate high stability at both pH 9 and 12. By pairing 2,6‐DPPEAQ with a potassium ferri/ferrocyanide positive electrolyte across an inexpensive, nonfluorinated permselective polymer membrane, this near‐neutral quinone flow battery exhibits an open‐circuit voltage of 1.0 V and a capacity fade rate of 0.00036% per cycle and 0.014% per day, which is the lowest ever reported for any flow battery in the absence of rebalancing processes. It is further demonstrated that the negolyte pH drifts upward upon atmospheric oxygen penetration but, when oxygen is excluded, oscillates reversibly between 9 and 12 during cycling. These results enhance the suitability of aqueous‐soluble redox‐active organics for use in large‐scale energy storage, potentially enabling massive penetration of intermittent renewable electricity.
Description
Other Available Sources
Keywords
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment, General Materials Science, energy storage, redox-flow battery, quinone, long lifetime
Terms of Use
This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Open Access Policy Articles (OAP), as set forth at Terms of Service