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Anthraquinone Derivatives in Aqueous Flow Batteries
Author(s) -
Gerhardt Michael R.,
Tong Liuchuan,
GómezBombarelli Rafael,
Chen Qing,
Marshak Michael P.,
Galvin Cooper J.,
AspuruGuzik Alán,
Gordon Roy G.,
Aziz Michael J.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
advanced energy materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.08
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1614-6840
pISSN - 1614-6832
DOI - 10.1002/aenm.201601488
Subject(s) - flow battery , bromine , anthraquinone , bromide , redox , aqueous solution , inorganic chemistry , sulfonic acid , electrolyte , chemistry , quinone , materials science , electrode , organic chemistry
Anthraquinone derivatives are being considered for large scale energy storage applications because of their chemical tunability and rapid redox kinetics. The authors investigate four anthraquinone derivatives as negative electrolyte candidates for an aqueous quinone‐bromide redox flow battery: anthraquinone‐2‐sulfonic acid (AQS), 1,8‐dihydroxyanthraquinone‐2,7‐disulfonic acid (DHAQDS), alizarin red S (ARS), and 1,4‐dihydroxyanthraquinone‐2,3‐dimethylsulfonic acid (DHAQDMS). The standard reduction potentials are all lower than that of anthraquinone‐2,7‐disulfonic acid (AQDS), the molecule used in previous quinone‐bromide batteries. DHAQDS and ARS undergo irreversible reactions on contact with bromine, which precludes their use against bromine but not necessarily against other electrolytes. DHAQDMS is apparently unreactive with bromine but cannot be reversibly reduced, whereas AQS is stable against bromine and stable upon reduction. The authors demonstrate an AQS‐bromide flow cell with higher open circuit potential and peak galvanic power density than the equivalent AQDS‐bromide cell. This study demonstrates the use of chemical synthesis to tailor organic molecules for improving flow battery performance.

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