Viologen Hydrothermal Synthesis and Structure-Property Relationships for Redox Flow Battery Optimization
Type
PreprintKAUST Grant Number
OSR-2017-CRG6-3453.02Date
2022-10-19Permanent link to this record
http://hdl.handle.net/10754/685145
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Aqueous organic redox flow batteries (AORFBs) are an emerging grid energy storage technology for fire safe grid energy storage systems with sustainable material feedstocks. Yet, designing organic redox molecules with the desired solubility, viscosity, permeability, formal potential, kinetics, and stability while remaining synthetically scalable is challenging. Herein, we demonstrate the adaptability of a single-step, high-yield hydrothermal reaction for viologen chloride salts, which have shown promise for pH neutral AORFB. Nine viologens, including five symmetric and four asymmetric, were synthesized in high purity for physiochemical and electrochemical characterization. New empirical insights are gleaned into fundamental structure-property relationships for multi-objective optimization. Ultimately, a new Dex-DiOH-Vi derivative showcased record viologen concentration of 2.5 M in an anolyte-limiting AORFB with 14-days of stable cycling performance. This work highlights the importance of designing efficient synthetic approaches of organic redox species for molecular engineering high-performance and sustainable flow battery electrolytes.Citation
Sullivan, P., Liu, H., Lv, X.-L., Jin, S., Li, W., & Feng, D. (2022). Viologen Hydrothermal Synthesis and Structure-Property Relationships for Redox Flow Battery Optimization. https://doi.org/10.26434/chemrxiv-2022-3rmd9Sponsors
D.F. acknowledges the start-up funds from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, WARF Accelerator Project (AP) via 197500-135-AAJ4936, and Draper Technology Innovation Fund (TIF) under 197500-135-AAJ4236. P.S. thanks the support by Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate Education (VCRGE) via 1975XX-135-AAI2755. S.J. and W.L. thank the support by the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) Office of Sponsored Research (OSR) under award no. OSR-2017-CRG6-3453.02. The Bruker Quazar APEX2 was purchased by UW–Madison Department of Chemistry with a portion of a generous gift from Paul J. and Margaret M. Bender. The Bruker AVANCE 400 NMR spectrometer was supported by NSF grant CHE-1048642.Publisher
American Chemical Society (ACS)ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.26434/chemrxiv-2022-3rmd9