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Research shows dye found in fabric is good at storing and energy

A sapphire-colored dye called methylene blue is a common ingredient in wastewater from textile mills.

But UB scientists think it may be possible to give this industrial pollutant a second life. In a new study, they show that the dye, when dissolved in water, is good at storing and releasing energy on cue.

This makes the compound a promising candidate material for redox flow batteries โ€” large, rechargeable, liquid-based batteries that could enable future wind farms and solar homes to stockpile electricity for calm or rainy days.

The research appeared online on Aug. 13 in the journal ChemElectroChem.

โ€œMethylene blue is a widely used dye. It can be harmful to health, so itโ€™s not something you want to dump into the environment without treating it,โ€ says lead researcher Timothy Cook, assistant professor of chemistry, College of Arts and Sciences. โ€œThereโ€™s been a lot of work done on ways to sequester methylene blue out of water, but the problem with a lot of these methods is that theyโ€™re expensive and generate other kinds of waste products.โ€

โ€œBut what if instead of just cleaning the water up, we could find a new way to use it? Thatโ€™s what really motivated this project,โ€ says first author Anjula Kosswattaarachchi, a UB PhD student in chemistry.

Upcycling methylene blue โ€” and wastewater?

The study is just the first step in assessing how โ€” and whether โ€” methylene blue from industrial wastewater can be used in batteries.

โ€œFor this to be practical, we would need to avoid the costly process of extracting the dye from the water,โ€ Cook says. โ€œOne of the things weโ€™re interested in is whether there might be a way to literally repurpose the wastewater itself.

โ€œIn textile-making, there are salts in the wastewater. Usually, to make a redox flow battery work, you have to add salt as a supporting electrolyte, so the salt in wastewater might be a built-in solution. This is all speculative right now. We donโ€™t know if it will work because we havenโ€™t tested it yet.โ€

What Cook and Kosswattaarachchi have shown โ€” so far โ€” is that methylene blue is good at important tasks associated with energy storage. In experiments, the scientists built two simple batteries that employed the dye โ€” dissolved in salt water โ€” to capture, store and release electrons, all crucial jobs in the life of a power cell.

The first battery the researchers made operated with near-perfect efficiency when it was charged and drained 50 times. Any electrical energy the scientists put in, they also got out, for the most part.

Over time, however, the batteryโ€™s capacity for storing energy fell as molecules of methylene blue became trapped on a membrane critical to the deviceโ€™s proper function.

Choosing a new membrane material solved this problem in the scientistsโ€™ second battery. This device maintained the near-perfect efficiency of the first model, but had no notable drop in energy-storage capacity over 12 cycles of charging and discharging.

The results mean that methylene blue is a viable material for liquid batteries. With this established, the team hopes to take the research one step further by obtaining real wastewater from a textile mill that uses the dye.

โ€œWeโ€™d like to evaporate the wastewater into a more concentrated solution containing the methylene blue and the salts, which can then be tested directly in a battery,โ€ Cook says.

A personal connection to the study

The project is important to Kosswattaarachchi from a personal standpoint: Before coming to UB, she worked in textiles, developing new fabric technologies for the Sri Lanka Institute of Nanotechnology (SLINTEC).

Textiles are one of the countryโ€™s most important economic sectors, and the industry creates many jobs. But pollution is a downside, with wastewater an environmental concern.

โ€œWe believe that this work could set the stage for an alternative route for wastewater management, paving a path to a green energy-storage technology,โ€ Kosswattaarachchi says.

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