Nature Communications (May 2024)

Starch-mediated colloidal chemistry for highly reversible zinc-based polyiodide redox flow batteries

  • Zhiquan Wei,
  • Zhaodong Huang,
  • Guojin Liang,
  • Yiqiao Wang,
  • Shixun Wang,
  • Yihan Yang,
  • Tao Hu,
  • Chunyi Zhi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48263-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Aqueous Zn-I flow batteries utilizing low-cost porous membranes are promising candidates for high-power-density large-scale energy storage. However, capacity loss and low Coulombic efficiency resulting from polyiodide cross-over hinder the grid-level battery performance. Here, we develop colloidal chemistry for iodine-starch catholytes, endowing enlarged-sized active materials by strong chemisorption-induced colloidal aggregation. The size-sieving effect effectively suppresses polyiodide cross-over, enabling the utilization of porous membranes with high ionic conductivity. The developed flow battery achieves a high-power density of 42 mW cm−2 at 37.5 mA cm−2 with a Coulombic efficiency of over 98% and prolonged cycling for 200 cycles at 32.4 Ah L−1 posolyte (50% state of charge), even at 50 °C. Furthermore, the scaled-up flow battery module integrating with photovoltaic packs demonstrates practical renewable energy storage capabilities. Cost analysis reveals a 14.3 times reduction in the installed cost due to the applicability of cheap porous membranes, indicating its potential competitiveness for grid energy storage.