Phosphonate-based iron complex for a cost-effective and long cycling aqueous iron redox flow battery

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Abstract

A promising metal-organic complex, iron (Fe)-NTMPA2, consisting of Fe(III) chloride and nitrilotri-(methylphosphonic acid) (NTMPA), is designed for use in aqueous iron redox flow batteries. A full-cell testing, where a concentrated Fe-NTMPA2 anolyte (0.67 M) is paired with a Fe-CN catholyte, demonstrates exceptional cycling stability over 1000 charge/discharge cycles, and noteworthy performances, including 96% capacity utilization, a minimal capacity fade rate of 0.0013% per cycle (1.3% over 1,000 cycles), high Coulombic efficiency and energy efficiency near 100% and 87%, respectively, all achieved under a current density of 20 mA·cm-². Furthermore, density functional theory unveils two potential coordination structures for Fe-NTMPA2 complexes, improving the understanding between the ligand coordination environment and electron transfer kinetics. When paired with a high redox potential Fe-Dcbpy/CN catholyte, 2,2′-bipyridine-4,4′-dicarboxylic (Dcbpy) acid and cyanide (CN) ligands, Fe-NTMPA2 demonstrates a notably elevated cell voltage of 1 V, enabling a practical energy density of up to 9 Wh/L.

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Nambafu, G. S., Hollas, A. M., Zhang, S., Rice, P. S., Boglaienko, D., Fulton, J. L., … Li, G. (2024). Phosphonate-based iron complex for a cost-effective and long cycling aqueous iron redox flow battery. Nature Communications, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45862-3

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