Surfactant-enabled strategy for molecular solar thermal energy storage systems in water
Journal article, 2025

Molecular solar thermal energy storage (MOST) systems, which absorb sunlight, store this energy in chemical bonds, and release it as heat, are receiving increasing attention in renewable energy storage applications. Among the norbornadiene/quadricyclane (NBD/QC) couples developed for MOST, the 2,3-difunctionalized cyano- and p-aryl-substituted NBD/QC couples have received greater attention for their promising properties. However, their application in solution requires the use of hazardous solvents, which limits their potential for large-scale implementation. Here, new greener systems consisting of cyano- and p-alkoxyphenyl-substituted NBD/QC derivatives dissolved in non-ionic surfactants and water were investigated. Concentrations of NBD up to 1.6 M were achieved by tuning the water/surfactant ratio, meeting the solubilization properties of organic solvents. The most promising system was further characterized, and its properties in water-based solutions were compared with those observed in toluene. Integration into a solar energy-harvesting liquid device led to the full conversion of the NBD to QC. The evaluation of the heat release performance upon catalytic trigger resulted in a temperature increase of 4.7 degrees C in ambient conditions. This demonstrates that promising NBDs/QCs can be used for MOST in aqueous media without compromising key performance parameters such as energy density, photoconversion, and catalyzed heat release.

Author

Lorette Fernandez

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

Helen Holzel

Justus Liebig University Giessen

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

Pedro Ferreira

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

Nicolo Baggi

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

Kevin Moreno

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

Zhihang Wang

University of Derby

University of Cambridge

Kasper Moth-Poulsen

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Green Chemistry

1463-9262 (ISSN) 1463-9270 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Photo Thermal Management Materials (PHOTERM)

European Commission (EC) (EC/H2020/101002131), 2021-10-01 -- 2026-09-30.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Energy Systems

DOI

10.1039/d5gc04357c

PubMed

41126905

More information

Latest update

10/30/2025