Professor Jie Bao
Meeting the demand for large-scale energy storage
How vanadium redox flow batteries are changing the way we store energy and provide power.
As the adoption of renewable energy continues to increase, so does the need for more efficient and sustainable energy storage. While wind and solar generate affordable electricity, this energy is often intermittent and reliant on significant storage space to avoid outages. The technology however is a safe, easy-to-recycle and low-maintenance option that allows for increased resilience of the energy supply during times of high demand and beyond.
Professor Skyllas-Kazacos and her research team in 1988 with the first laboratory prototype vanadium cell.(Supplied: UNSW/Maria Skyllas-Kazacos).听Early Vanadium Battery research team (1988) showing (L-R) Franz Grossmith, Michael Kazacos, Maria and Rodney McDermott with the first laboratory prototype vanadium cell.
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Since the invention of the very first all-vanadium redox flow cell by UNSW Professor Maria Skyllas-Kazacos and her team in 1984, the university has been at the forefront of technology. This work has been especially significant within the context of renewable energy and Australia鈥檚 rapid switch to the uptake of net-zero policies.
While wind and solar provide a range of benefits to community and industry alike, they also present their own challenges.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 have just solar or wind farms because the sun doesn鈥檛 shine at night and the wind doesn鈥檛 always blow."听
听-听Professor Skyllas-Kazacos
Energy storage however allows users to still enjoy their renewable power systems as needed by ensuring large battery systems remain charged 鈥 even during the absence of sunlight during inclement weather.
鈥淲ith coal fire or gas generators, you can control how much energy you produce, so if that demand goes up 鈥 you can produce more but we can鈥檛 do that with renewable energy,鈥 says team member Professor Jie Bao. 鈥淭he key technology that鈥檚 required here is energy storage,鈥 he adds. 鈥淰anadium flow batteries are ideal for renewable energy storage since their cost per kWh decreases with increasing storage capacity, making them the cheapest form of energy storage for long duration applications.鈥
Security of energy supply
Beyond resilience to the actual grid, one of the many advantages of the vanadium battery includes applications that can be used to help off-grid and remote communities store more energy. 鈥淓ven as recently as during COVID-19, we had a large demand for mobile hospitals and other areas where we couldn鈥檛 power them from the hospital grid because there wasn鈥檛 enough capacity,鈥 says Associate Professor Chris Menictas. 鈥淗aving that additional capacity available adds a resilience to these systems.鈥
What鈥檚 more, if the grid fails 鈥 energy and power can be taken from the VRFB and placed back into the grid to ensure less disruption and negative impact. 鈥淚f the electricity transmission system went down, you could have batteries that would help keep that essential infrastructure running,鈥 he adds.
For smaller scale suburban communities looking to bolster their access to power, VRFB also has applications within this context. The batteries can be integrated into a microgrid.
2007 V-Fuel Lab photo showing a 5 kW vanadium battery prototype.
鈥淚f the whole neighbourhood had solar panels for example, they wouldn鈥檛 need to each have their own battery to charge up, they鈥檇 just dump all of their surplus energy into that community battery and get it back at night-time.鈥
听-听Professor Skyllas-Kazacos
Importantly, the vanadium battery is a sustainable option that eliminates thermal issues and the risk of fire or explosion. 鈥淭he vanadium electrolyte has an indefinite life so if the battery is to be decommissioned after 20 years, you can take the electrolyte and put it into another battery,鈥 adds听A/Prof. Menictas.听鈥淵ou just keep reusing the electrolyte, which creates minimal waste.鈥
Professor Skyllas-Kazacos with Dr Menictas and Professor Jens T眉bke (far left), in 2018 at a 2MW/20MWh VRFB site at Fraunhofer ICT in Germany. (Supplied: Maria Skyllas-Kazacos).
Future focused
Having provided the foundations for the research and development of vanadium battery production and technology, Prof. Skyllas-Kazacos is happy to see other groups now extending her work and commercialising the research. 鈥淭his type of industry contribution has allowed for a reduction in cost, which is a major outcome and something we鈥檙e also continuing to work on at UNSW.鈥
As the potential of vanadium battery technology becomes increasingly apparent, Prof. Skyllas-Kazacos and her team would like to see the local production of vanadium batteries and the electrolyte add value through new job and industry opportunities, as well as the extraction and processing of the relevant minerals on home soil.
鈥淔rom the very beginning when we patented the first battery 鈥 my dream was to see vanadium batteries manufactured in Australia. After 40 years of research, I think the time has finally come.鈥澨
听-听Professor Skyllas-Kazacos
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