Issue 11, 2011

Chemical solutions for the closed-cycle storage of solar energy

Abstract

This review analyzes the inherent scientific challenges of realizing the potential of storing solar energy by photochemical generation of high-energy metastable compounds whose subsequent thermal isomerization releases large amounts of low-temperature (<500 K) heat. Such compounds may be stored at room temperature for days or months, regenerated using sunlight, and may be cycled many times without significant degradation. After highlighting some of the general challenges of solar energy conversion and storage, we discuss how recent advances in understanding the effect of molecular strain on the thermal and photochemical reactivity of small molecules offers new opportunities for a systematic approach to the molecular design of solar thermal fuels, defining the molecular properties which determine the fundamental limits of such a material's performance characteristics.

Graphical abstract: Chemical solutions for the closed-cycle storage of solar energy

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
31 May 2011
Accepted
18 Jul 2011
First published
23 Aug 2011

Energy Environ. Sci., 2011,4, 4449-4472

Chemical solutions for the closed-cycle storage of solar energy

T. J. Kucharski, Y. Tian, S. Akbulatov and R. Boulatov, Energy Environ. Sci., 2011, 4, 4449 DOI: 10.1039/C1EE01861B

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