Cell Reports Physical Science (Aug 2021)

Thermogalvanic cells demonstrate inherent physiochemical limitations in redox-active electrolytes at water-in-salt concentrations

  • Mark A. Buckingham,
  • Kristine Laws,
  • Huanxin Li,
  • Yafei Kuang,
  • Leigh Aldous

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 8
p. 100510

Abstract

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Summary: The majority of usable energy generated by humanity is lost as waste heat, but thermogalvanic systems (or thermocells) can address this problem by converting low-grade waste heat directly into electricity using redox chemistry. The concentration of the redox couple is a critical parameter; almost invariably, higher concentrations result in more power. This study exploits the simple synergy between Na+ and K+ counter ions to achieve—to the best of our knowledge—the most concentrated stable aqueous ferricyanide/ferrocyanide thermocell to date, at 1.6 m [Fe(CN)6]3−/4−. Despite increasing the concentration by 400% relative to the standard K3/K4[Fe(CN)6] electrolyte (0.4 m), electrical power production increased only 166%. Pushing the system from conventional salt-in-water electrolytes into the quasi-stable water-in-salt region (up to 2.4 m) resulted in a decrease in power. Detailed characterization highlighted the various physicochemical hurdles introduced by these extremely concentrated electrolytes; the identified issues have direct relevance to other energy systems also seeking to use the highest possible concentration.

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