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In situ electrochemical recomposition of decomposed redox-active species in aqueous organic flow batteries.

Yan JingEvan Wenbo ZhaoMarc-Antoni GouletMeisam BahariEric M FellShijian JinAli DavoodiErlendur JónssonMin WuClare P GreyRoy G GordonMichael J Aziz
Published in: Nature chemistry (2022)
Aqueous organic redox flow batteries offer a safe and potentially inexpensive solution to the problem of storing massive amounts of electricity produced from intermittent renewables. However, molecular decomposition represents a major barrier to commercialization-and although structural modifications can improve stability, it comes at the expense of synthetic cost and molecular weight. Now, utilizing 2,6-dihydroxy-anthraquinone (DHAQ) without further structural modification, we demonstrate that the regeneration of the original molecule after decomposition represents a viable route to achieve low-cost, long-lifetime aqueous organic redox flow batteries. We used in situ (online) NMR and electron paramagnetic resonance, and complementary electrochemical analyses to show that the decomposition compound 2,6-dihydroxy-anthrone (DHA) and its tautomer, 2,6-dihydroxy-anthranol (DHAL) can be recomposed to DHAQ electrochemically through two steps: oxidation of DHA(L) 2- to the dimer (DHA) 2 4- by one-electron transfer followed by oxidation of (DHA) 2 4- to DHAQ 2- by three-electron transfer per DHAQ molecule. This electrochemical regeneration process also rejuvenates the positive electrolyte-rebalancing the states of charge of both electrolytes without introducing extra ions.
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