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Computational and experimental investigation of the effect of cation structure on the solubility of anionic flow battery active-materials

Recent advances in clean, sustainable energy sources such as wind and solar have enabled significant cost improvements, yet their inherent intermittency remains a considerable challenge for year-round reliability demanding the need for grid-scale energy storage. Nonaqueous redox flow batteries (NRFB...

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Autores principales: Visayas, Benjoe Rey B., Pahari, Shyam K., Gokoglan, Tugba Ceren, Golen, James A., Agar, Ertan, Cappillino, Patrick J., Mayes, Maricris L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8672735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35024113
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc04990a
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author Visayas, Benjoe Rey B.
Pahari, Shyam K.
Gokoglan, Tugba Ceren
Golen, James A.
Agar, Ertan
Cappillino, Patrick J.
Mayes, Maricris L.
author_facet Visayas, Benjoe Rey B.
Pahari, Shyam K.
Gokoglan, Tugba Ceren
Golen, James A.
Agar, Ertan
Cappillino, Patrick J.
Mayes, Maricris L.
author_sort Visayas, Benjoe Rey B.
collection PubMed
description Recent advances in clean, sustainable energy sources such as wind and solar have enabled significant cost improvements, yet their inherent intermittency remains a considerable challenge for year-round reliability demanding the need for grid-scale energy storage. Nonaqueous redox flow batteries (NRFBs) have the potential to address this need, with attractive attributes such as flexibility to accommodate long- and short-duration storage, separately scalable energy and power ratings, and improved safety profile over integrated systems such as lithium-ion batteries. Currently, the low-solubility of NRFB electrolytes fundamentally limits their energy density. However, synthetically exploring the large chemical and parameter space of NRFB active materials is not only costly but also intractable. Here, we report a computational framework, coupled with experimental validation, designed to predict the solubility trends of electrolytes, incorporating both the lattice and solvation free energies. We reveal that lattice free energy, which has previously been neglected, has a significant role in tuning electrolyte solubility, and that solvation free energies alone is insufficient. The desymmetrization of the alkylammonium cation leading to short-chain, asymmetric cations demonstrated a modest increase in solubility, which can be further explored for NRFB electrolyte development and optimization. The resulting synergistic computational–experimental approach provides a cost-effective strategy in the development of high-solubility active materials for high energy density NRFB systems.
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spelling pubmed-86727352022-01-11 Computational and experimental investigation of the effect of cation structure on the solubility of anionic flow battery active-materials Visayas, Benjoe Rey B. Pahari, Shyam K. Gokoglan, Tugba Ceren Golen, James A. Agar, Ertan Cappillino, Patrick J. Mayes, Maricris L. Chem Sci Chemistry Recent advances in clean, sustainable energy sources such as wind and solar have enabled significant cost improvements, yet their inherent intermittency remains a considerable challenge for year-round reliability demanding the need for grid-scale energy storage. Nonaqueous redox flow batteries (NRFBs) have the potential to address this need, with attractive attributes such as flexibility to accommodate long- and short-duration storage, separately scalable energy and power ratings, and improved safety profile over integrated systems such as lithium-ion batteries. Currently, the low-solubility of NRFB electrolytes fundamentally limits their energy density. However, synthetically exploring the large chemical and parameter space of NRFB active materials is not only costly but also intractable. Here, we report a computational framework, coupled with experimental validation, designed to predict the solubility trends of electrolytes, incorporating both the lattice and solvation free energies. We reveal that lattice free energy, which has previously been neglected, has a significant role in tuning electrolyte solubility, and that solvation free energies alone is insufficient. The desymmetrization of the alkylammonium cation leading to short-chain, asymmetric cations demonstrated a modest increase in solubility, which can be further explored for NRFB electrolyte development and optimization. The resulting synergistic computational–experimental approach provides a cost-effective strategy in the development of high-solubility active materials for high energy density NRFB systems. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8672735/ /pubmed/35024113 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc04990a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Visayas, Benjoe Rey B.
Pahari, Shyam K.
Gokoglan, Tugba Ceren
Golen, James A.
Agar, Ertan
Cappillino, Patrick J.
Mayes, Maricris L.
Computational and experimental investigation of the effect of cation structure on the solubility of anionic flow battery active-materials
title Computational and experimental investigation of the effect of cation structure on the solubility of anionic flow battery active-materials
title_full Computational and experimental investigation of the effect of cation structure on the solubility of anionic flow battery active-materials
title_fullStr Computational and experimental investigation of the effect of cation structure on the solubility of anionic flow battery active-materials
title_full_unstemmed Computational and experimental investigation of the effect of cation structure on the solubility of anionic flow battery active-materials
title_short Computational and experimental investigation of the effect of cation structure on the solubility of anionic flow battery active-materials
title_sort computational and experimental investigation of the effect of cation structure on the solubility of anionic flow battery active-materials
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8672735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35024113
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc04990a
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