More sustainable and less expensive: organic high-capacity battery
Our modern rechargeable batteries, such as lithium-ion batteries, are
anything but sustainable. One alternative is organic batteries with
redox-organic electrode materials (OEMs), which can be synthesized from
natural “green” materials. In the journal Angewandte Chemie, a
Chinese team has now introduced a new OEM for aqueous organic
high-capacity batteries that can be easily and cheaply recycled.
© Wiley-VCH, re-use with credit to 'Angewandte Chemie' and a link to the original article.
Traditional inorganic electrode materials in commercial batteries
involve a whole spectrum of problems: limited resources, toxic elements,
environmental problems, partly unacceptable mining conditions, limited
capacity, difficulties in recycling, and high costs. No sustainable
batteries can be developed on a large scale based on these electrodes,
though they are needed for an energy transition.
Organic batteries with OEMs are still at the very beginning of their
long road toward practical application. A team led by Chengliang Wang at
Huazhong University of Science and Technology has now taken a
significant step in this direction. The goal is to use OEMs in batteries
with aqueous electrolytes. These are “greener”, more sustainable, and
less expensive than the conventional organic electrolytes in lithium-ion
batteries.
The team chose to use azobenzene, a material that can be produced
inexpensively on a large scale and is insoluble in water while being
highly soluble in organic solvents. Whereas most other functional groups
can only transfer one electron, the azo group (–N=N–) in this molecule
is able to reversibly transfer two electrons, which contributes to a
high capacity. Comprehensive analyses demonstrated that, during the
discharge process, the azobenzene is converted to hydroazobenzene after
absorbing two of the electrons—through the rapid, reversible binding of
two protons (H+). Prototype coin cells and laminated pouch
cells of various sizes with azobenzene OEMs and zinc counter-electrodes
reached capacities on the scale of ampere hours, which were retained
over 200 charge/discharge cycles.
In contrast to polymeric OEMs, the small azobenzene molecules can be
inexpensively recycled with a simple extraction using commercial organic
solvents. The electrode material is air stable in both its charged and
discharged states and can be recycled in yields of over 90% in every
state of charge. The recycled products could be directly reused as OEMs
with no loss of capacity.
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About the Author
Chengliang Wang is a
Professor at Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST). He
focuses on novel conjugated organic and polymeric materials for
optoelectronics and batteries.