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Unlocking corrosion-free Zn/Br flow batteries for grid-scale energy storage - Energy & Green Tech

Scientists have found a way to push zinc–bromine flow batteries to the next level. By trapping corrosive bromine with a simple molecular scavenger, they were able to remove a major barrier to the performance and lifespan of flow batteries.

By adding a sodium sulfamate (SANa) scavenger to the electrolyte, the researchers were able to trap the bromine (Br) produced during battery operation by converting it into a brominated amine. This simple change delivered a twofold payoff: it extended the battery life by reducing the corrosive Br and made the batteries much safer for both the environment and the people maintaining them.

After comparing it with traditional bromine-based flow batteries, they found that while the conventional systems showed a sharp drop in performance after only 30 cycles due to corrosion, the newer flow battery designs operated for over 700 cycles—nearly 1,400 hours—without significant performance loss.

The findings are published in Nature Energy. 

Bromine acts as both the boon and bane

Flow batteries are rechargeable systems that store energy in liquid electrolytes held in external tanks, making them uniquely scalable and safe for renewable energy applications.

Zinc–bromine flow battery variants are particularly gaining traction due to their high energy density and low-cost materials, positioning them as potential alternatives to traditional rechargeable batteries. These batteries store and deliver electricity by pumping liquid solutions from external tanks through a central reaction unit.

During charging, zinc ions plate out on the negative electrode as solid metal, while bromide ions are oxidized to bromine at the positive electrode. These reactions reverse the dissolution of zinc back into the liquid, and bromine reverts to bromide, releasing stored electrical energy.

However, today's bromine-based flow batteries struggle with short lifetimes. The bromine released during charging eats up key parts like electrodes, pipes, and even the storage tanks. On top of that, bromine is highly volatile and toxic, so even small leaks can pollute the air, irritate sensitive tissues, and affect the nervous system.

After several attempts to find a perfect antidote to the problem, researchers discovered that sodium sulfamate or SANa functioned as a chemical trap and altered how bromine behaves within the battery.


SANa initiated a disproportionation reaction—a redox process in which a single substance is both oxidized and reduced—splitting the bromine gas and binding to it to form a mild product, N-bromo sodium sulfamate. This reaction reduced the concentration of free-floating bromine to an acceptable level of ~7 millimoles per liter (mM).

The scavenger's action of binding to bromine had a beneficial reaction: a two-electron transfer phenomenon, which enabled the battery to store significantly more energy. The flow battery with added SANa achieved an energy density of 152 Wh/l, compared with 90 Wh/l for conventional versions.

To test the battery's limits, the team designed a 5 kW stack comprising 30 individual battery cells connected in series. They found that the newly designed flow battery achieved over 700 stable cycles. The redesigned flow battery delivered more than 700 stable cycles and did so at a much lower cost, since it no longer required expensive corrosion-resistant membranes, pumps, or storage tanks.

The researchers are hopeful that insights from this study can make it feasible to design mild, long-life, and high-energy-density Br-based batteries for grid-scale applications. 

Source: Unlocking corrosion-free Zn/Br flow batteries for grid-scale energy storage