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Cho, Jaephil
Nano Energy Storage Material Lab.
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Material design and engineering of next-generation flow-battery technologies

Author(s)
Park, MinjoonRyu, JaechanWang, WeiCho, Jaephil
Issued Date
2016-11
DOI
10.1038/natrevmats.2016.80
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/22350
Fulltext
https://www.nature.com/articles/natrevmats201680
Citation
NATURE REVIEWS MATERIALS, v.2, no.1, pp.16080
Abstract
Spatial separation of the electrolyte and electrode is the main characteristic of flow-battery technologies, which liberates them from the constraints of overall energy content and the energy/power ratio. The concept of a flowing electrolyte not only presents a cost-effective approach for large-scale energy storage, but has also recently been used to develop a wide range of new hybrid energy storage and conversion systems. The advent of flow-based lithium-ion, organic redox-active materials, metal-air cells and photoelectrochemical batteries promises new opportunities for advanced electrical energy-storage technologies. In this Review, we present a critical overview of recent progress in conventional aqueous redox-flow batteries and next-generation flow batteries, highlighting the latest innovative alternative materials. We outline their technical feasibility for use in long-term and large-scale electrical energy-storage devices, as well as the limitations that need to be overcome, providing our view of promising future research directions in the field of redox-flow batteries.
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
ISSN
2058-8437
Keyword
HIGH-ENERGY-DENSITYMETAL-AIR BATTERIESVANADIUM REDOXCOMPOSITE MEMBRANEELECTROCHEMICAL PROPERTIESELECTRODE MATERIALSNANOSTRUCTURED ELECTROCATALYSTSPHOTOELECTROCHEMICAL CELLSEMILIQUID BATTERYMOLECULAR-WEIGHT

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