High-Voltage, Room-Temperature Liquid Metal Flow Battery Enabled by Na-K|K-β″-Alumina Stability

2018 
Summary Flow batteries are a compelling grid-scale energy storage technology because the stored energy is decoupled from the system power. Aqueous redox flow batteries (RFBs), however, are limited by low open-circuit voltages (OCVs). Replacing the aqueous negative electrolyte (negolyte) with liquid alkali metals—of which Na-K, a room-temperature liquid metal alloy, is attractive—would increase the OCV considerably. However, a suitable solid electrolyte has not been reported for Na-K. Here we show that K-β″-alumina is a selective and robust K + ion conductor in contact with Na-K, to which it is stable with minimal exchange of Na. We report the cycling of cells with OCVs of 3.1–3.4 V employing aqueous and nonaqueous positive electrolytes (posolytes), and power density tests showing promising maximum power densities of 65 mW cm −2 at 22°C and >100 mW cm −2 at 57°C, ohmically limited by 330-μm K-β″-alumina membranes. Further development of Na-K|K-β″-alumina batteries could unlock cost-effective energy storage.
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