Now, a team at Northwestern University has transformed an organic industrial waste product into an efficient storage agent for sustainable energy solutions that can one day be applied at much larger scales. This marks the first time a waste molecule - specifically, triphenylphosphine oxide (TPPO) - has been used to power a redox flow battery.
"Battery research has traditionally been dominated by engineers and materials scientists," said Northwestern chemist and lead author Christian Malapit. "Synthetic chemists can contribute to the field by molecularly engineering an organic waste product into an energy-storing molecule. Our discovery showcases the potential of transforming waste compounds into valuable resources, offering a sustainable pathway for innovation in battery technology."
Malapit is an assistant professor in the department of chemistry at Northwestern's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences.
According to the new research, published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, a "one-pot" reaction allows chemists to turn TPPO into a usable product with powerful potential to store energy.
"Not only can an organic molecule be used, but it can also achieve high-energy density - getting closer to its metal-based competitors - along with high stability," said Emily Mahoney, a Ph.D. candidate in the Malapit lab and the paper's first author. "These two parameters are traditionally challenging to optimize together, so being able to show this for a molecule that is waste-derived is particularly exciting."
To achieve both energy density and stability, the team needed to identify a strategy that allowed electrons to pack tightly together in the solution without losing storage capacity over time. They looked to the past and found a paper from 1968 describing the electrochemistry of phosphine oxides and, according to Mahoney, "ran with it."
Then, to evaluate the molecule's resilience as a potential energy-storage agent, the team ran tests using static electrochemical charge and discharge experiments similar to the process of charging a battery, using the battery, and then charging it again, over and over. After 350 cycles, the battery maintained remarkable health, losing negligible capacity over time.
In the meantime, the group hopes other researchers will pick up the charge and begin to work with TPPO to further optimize and improve its potential.
Research Report:Triphenylphosphine Oxide-Derived Anolyte for Application in Nonaqueous Redox Flow BatteryClick to copy article link
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