Vitamin B-Inspired Molecules Form Basis for Alt-Energy Storage 29811
July 27, 2016
Harvard researchers have reached a new milestone in the development of organic flow batteries for alternative-energy storage, identifying a new class of high-performing organic molecules inspired by vitamin B2 that can safely store electricity from intermittent energy sources in large-scale batteries.
The new work has its roots in research conducted two years ago by Harvard researchers Michael J. Aziz, a professor of materials and energy technologies; Roy Gordon, a professor of chemistry and materials science; and Alan Aspuru-Guzik, a professor of chemistry, who sought to find organic alternatives to expensive, corrosive and toxic chemicals for what are called redox flow batteries (RFBs).
"Redox flow battery was invented back in 1970s," Kaixiang Lin, a PhD candidate at Harvard and first author of a paper published about the recent work in the journal, Nature Energy, explained to Design News in an interview. "Early development of RFB electrolyte materials focused on conventional metal ions such as vanadium, iron, or chromium dissolved in their salt solutions."
Recently, however, researchers started to use organic molecules, such as quinones, TEMPO, and viologens, to replace those metal ions to solve challenges that come with the development of RFBs, including high corrosivity, high membrane-crossover rate, and low solubility, he said. "Our lab pioneered the development of quinone-based RFB electrolyte materials," Lin said.
That was back in 2014, when Aziz, Gordon, and Aspuru-Guzik replaced metal ions used as conventional battery electrolyte materials in acidic electrolytes with quinones, which are molecules that store energy in plants and animals. The next year, they developed a quinone that could work in alkaline solutions alongside a common food additive called ferrocyanide.
The latest in this line of research is the discovery of new organic molecules that function similar as quinones and can be used for RFBs. To this end, the team found vitamin B2, which helps to store energy from food in the body, Lin said. The key difference between B2 and quinones is that nitrogen atoms, instead of oxygen atoms, are involved in picking up and giving off electrons.
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"As we dig deep into this molecule, we learned that alloxazine, which shares a very similar molecular structure with vitamin B2, performs much better under the requirement for RFB electrolyte materials, i.e. higher stability, lower reduction potential (higher battery voltage), etc.," he said. "The discovery of alloxazine along with its ease of synthesis became the backbone of this project, which we deemed vitamin B2-inspired."
The discovery of the alloxazine family "opens a new universe of molecules that we can synthesize to help improve battery performance" as researchers continue to work on organic options for grid-level energy storage for alternative energies like solar and wind, Lin said. The team will continue its research with the vitamin B2-inspired molecules as well as search for others in their work to develop better organic-based RFBs, he said.
Elizabeth Montalbano is a freelance writer who has written about technology and culture for more than 15 years. She has lived and worked as a professional journalist in Phoenix, San Francisco, and New York City. In her free time she enjoys surfing, traveling, music, yoga, and cooking. She currently resides in a village on the southwest coast of Portugal.
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