Spatial Structure Regulation: A Rod-Shaped Viologen Enables Long Lifetime in Aqueous Redox Flow Batteries

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2021 Dec 20;60(52):26971-26977. doi: 10.1002/anie.202110010. Epub 2021 Nov 18.

Abstract

A stable rod-like sulfonated viologen (R-Vi) derivative is developed through a spatial-structure-adjustment strategy for neutral aqueous organic redox flow batteries (AORFBs). The obtained R-Vi features four individual methyl groups on the 2,2',6,6'-positions of the 4,4'-bipyridine core ring. The tethered methyls confine the movement of the alkyl chain as well as the sulfonic anion, thus driving the spatial structure from sigmoid to rod shape. The R-Vi with weak charge attraction and large molecular dimension displays an ultralow membrane permeability that is only 14.7 % of that of typical sigmoid viologen. Moreover, the electron-donating effect of methyls endows R-Vi with the lowest redox potential of -0.55 V vs. SHE among one-electron-storage viologen-based AORFBs. The AORFB with the R-Vi anolyte and a K4 Fe(CN)6 catholyte exhibits an energy efficiency up to 87 % and extremely low capacity-fade rate of 0.007 % per cycle in 3200 continuous cycles.

Keywords: aqueous organic flow batteries; low molecular penetration; rod shape; spatial structure regulation; viologen.