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A bipolar nitronyl nitroxide small molecule for an all-organic symmetric redox-flow battery

An all-organic symmetric redox-flow battery (RFB) that employs nitronyl nitroxide (NN) units as a bipolar redox-active charge-storage material was designed and investigated. An organic molecule possessing two bipolar redox-active NN units connected via a tetraethylene glycol chain was synthesized fo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:NPG Asia materials 2017-01, Vol.9 (1), p.e340-e340
Main Authors: Hagemann, Tino, Winsberg, Jan, Häupler, Bernhard, Janoschka, Tobias, Gruber, Jeremy J, Wild, Andreas, Schubert, Ulrich S
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:An all-organic symmetric redox-flow battery (RFB) that employs nitronyl nitroxide (NN) units as a bipolar redox-active charge-storage material was designed and investigated. An organic molecule possessing two bipolar redox-active NN units connected via a tetraethylene glycol chain was synthesized for this purpose. Owing to the ethylene glycol chain, this molecule demonstrates good solubility in organic solvents. The electrochemical behavior of the obtained compound was investigated via cyclic voltammetry (CV) measurements and it features quasi-reversible redox reactions of the NN + /NN redox couple at E ½ =0.37 V and the NN/NN − redox couple at E ½ =−1.25 V versus AgNO 3 /Ag, which led to a promising cell voltage of 1.62 V in a subsequent battery application. A static solution-based battery exhibits a stable charge/discharge performance over 75 consecutive cycles with a high energy efficiency of 82% and an overall energy density of the electrolyte system of 0.67 W h l −1 . In addition, a pumped RFB test demonstrates an overall energy density of the electrolyte system of 4.1 W h l −1 and an energy efficiency of 79%. All-organic batteries: bipolar molecule goes with the flow A compound that can replace corrosive metal salts in fuel-cell-like ‘flow’ batteries has been discovered by a team in Germany. Redox flow batteries produce electrochemical energy by moving an electrolyte between separated cathode and anode compartments. These devices, which can be recharged nearly instantly by replacing the electrolyte, are set to become more sustainable thanks to a chemical synthesis developed by Ulrich S. Schubert from Friedrich Schiller University and colleagues. The team designed an organic molecule capable of acting as both battery anode and cathode through aromatic nitronyl nitroxide groups that release or take in electrons at moderate voltages. Attaching the aromatic redox units to a glycol chain gave the compound the solubility needed to make a flow battery with better capacity and efficiency than previous all-organic attempts. Redox-flow batteries (RFBs) seem to be tailor-made for the storage of sustainably generated electrical energy and are, in particular combined with photovoltaics and wind farms, well suited for the establishment of smart grids, which are essential to render the ‘Energiewende’. Therefore, an all-organic symmetric RFB with a bipolar molecule containing two redox-active nitronyl nitroxide units, connected via a tetraethylene glycol chain, as a
ISSN:1884-4049
1884-4057
1884-4057
DOI:10.1038/am.2016.195