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Earth Techling, January 15, 2014 Harvard Batery Could Help Wind, Solar Flow Flow batteries – more akin to fuel cells, really – are getting increasing attention as researchers press to meet a need for energy storage brought on by the rise of intermittent renewable sources like solar and wind. Now Harvard scientists, backed by the Obama administration’s ARPA-E program, have written up an advance that they say addresses the key matter of flow battery expense, thanks in part to rhubarb. Yes, rhubarb. It all comes down to something called “quinones,” described as “naturally abundant, inexpensive, small organic (carbon-based) molecules.” The Harvard team says it designed, built and tested a laboratory flow battery using quinones as an alternative to flow-battery favorite vanadium, the active metal component dissolved in the rechargeable soup of electrolytes that are stored in external tanks, then pumped into a cell to react electrochemically across a membrane to produce current. So where might these quinones come from? According to the Harvard release:
A metal-free battery, the Harvard team says, could make flow batteries a whole lot less expensive than they are today, allowing the world to take advantage of their great attribute: the ease with which they energy storage can be scaled simply by varying the size of the tanks holding the fluids. Not possible with solid-electrode batteries, explains Harvard:
But with flow batteries, the idea goes, you simply match your fluid tanks to the size of the energy storage you need. So you could go big for utility-scale storage. Or you could go small.
Harvard said their researchers are working with Connecticut-based Sustainable Innovations to develop the technology, and within three years expect “to deploy demonstration versions of the organic flow battery contained in a unit the size of a horse trailer. “
COPYRIGHT © 2013 EARTHTECHLING. This article originally appeared here. |
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