Jarrod D. Milshtein
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jarrod D. Milshtein.
Energy and Environmental Science | 2016
Jarrod D. Milshtein; Aman Preet Kaur; Matthew D. Casselman; Jeffrey A. Kowalski; Subrahmanyam Modekrutti; Peter L. Zhang; N. Harsha Attanayake; Corrine F. Elliott; Sean Parkin; Chad Risko; Fikile R. Brushett; Susan A. Odom
Non-aqueous redox flow batteries (NAqRFBs) employing redox-active organic molecules show promise to meet requirements for grid energy storage. Here, we combine the rational design of organic molecules with flow cell engineering to boost NAqRFB performance. We synthesize two highly soluble phenothiazine derivatives, N-(2-methoxyethyl)phenothiazine (MEPT) and N-[2-(2-methoxyethoxy)ethyl]phenothiazine (MEEPT), via a one-step synthesis from inexpensive precursors. Synthesis and isolation of the radical-cation salts permit UV-vis decay studies that illustrate the high stability of these open-shell species. Cyclic voltammetry and bulk electrolysis experiments reveal the promising electrochemical properties of MEPT and MEEPT under dilute conditions. A high performance non-aqueous flow cell, employing interdigitated flow fields and carbon paper electrodes, is engineered and demonstrated; polarization and impedance studies quantify the cells low area-specific resistance (3.2–3.3 Ω cm2). We combine the most soluble derivative, MEEPT, and its tetrafluoroborate radical-cation salt in the flow cell for symmetric cycling, evincing a current density of 100 mA cm−2 with undetectable capacity fade over 100 cycles. This coincident high current density and capacity retention is unprecedented in NAqRFB literature.
Chemsuschem | 2017
Jarrod D. Milshtein; Sydney L. Fisher; Tanya M. Breault; Levi T. Thompson; Fikile R. Brushett
Nonaqueous redox flow batteries (NAqRFBs) are promising devices for grid-scale energy storage, but high projected prices could limit commercial prospects. One route to reduced prices is to minimize or eliminate the expensive supporting salts typically employed in NAqRFBs. Herein, the feasibility of a flow cell operating in the absence of supporting salt by utilizing ionic active species is demonstrated. These ionic species have high conductivities in acetonitrile (12-19 mS cm-1 ) and cycle at 20 mA cm-2 with energy efficiencies (>75 %) comparable to those of state-of-the-art NAqRFBs employing high concentrations of supporting salt. A chemistry-agnostic techno-economic analysis highlights the possible cost savings of minimizing salt content in a NAqRFB. This work offers the first demonstration of a NAqRFB operating without supporting salt. The associated design principles can guide the development of future active species and could make NAqRFBs competitive with their aqueous counterparts.
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
Bing Yan; Nolan M. Concannon; Jarrod D. Milshtein; Fikile R. Brushett; Yogesh Surendranath
Polymer electrolyte membranes employed in contemporary fuel cells severely limit device design and restrict catalyst choice, but are essential for preventing short-circuiting reactions at unselective anode and cathode catalysts. Herein, we report that nickel sulfide Ni3 S2 is a highly selective catalyst for the oxygen reduction reaction in the presence of 1.0 m formate. We combine this selective cathode with a carbon-supported palladium (Pd/C) anode to establish a membrane-free, room-temperature formate fuel cell that operates under benign neutral pH conditions. Proof-of-concept cells display open circuit voltages of approximately 0.7 V and peak power values greater than 1 mW cm-2 , significantly outperforming the identical device employing an unselective platinum (Pt) cathode. The work establishes the power of selective catalysis to enable versatile membrane-free fuel cells.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2017
Jeffrey A. Kowalski; Matthew D. Casselman; Aman Preet Kaur; Jarrod D. Milshtein; Corrine F. Elliott; Subrahmanyam Modekrutti; N. Harsha Attanayake; Naijao Zhang; Sean Parkin; Chad Risko; Fikile R. Brushett; Susan A. Odom
Stable electron-donating organic compounds are of interest for numerous applications that require reversible electron-transfer reactions. Although many organic compounds are stable one-electron donors, removing a second electron from a small molecule to form its dication usually leads to rapid decomposition. For cost-effective electrochemical energy storage utilizing organic charge-storage species, the creation of high-capacity materials requires stabilizing more charge whilst keeping molecular weights low. Here we report the simple modification of N-ethylphenothiazine, which is only stable as a radical cation (not as a dication), and demonstrate that introducing electron-donating methoxy groups para to nitrogen leads to dramatically improved stability of the doubly oxidized (dication) state. Our results reveal that this derivative is more stable than an analogous compound with substituents that do not allow for further charge delocalization, rendering it a promising scaffold for developing atom-efficient, two-electron donors.
Journal of Power Sources | 2016
Rylan Dmello; Jarrod D. Milshtein; Fikile R. Brushett; Kyle C. Smith
Journal of Power Sources | 2016
Jarrod D. Milshtein; John L. Barton; Robert M. Darling; Fikile R. Brushett
Current opinion in chemical engineering | 2016
Jeffrey A. Kowalski; Liang Su; Jarrod D. Milshtein; Fikile R. Brushett
Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B-process Metallurgy and Materials Processing Science | 2014
Eric Gratz; Xiaofei Guan; Jarrod D. Milshtein; Uday B. Pal; Adam C. Powell
Electrochimica Acta | 2015
Jarrod D. Milshtein; Liang Su; Catherine Liou; Andres F. Badel; Fikile R. Brushett
ACS energy letters | 2017
Wentao Duan; Jinhua Huang; Jeffrey A. Kowalski; Ilya A. Shkrob; M. Vijayakumar; Eric D. Walter; Baofei Pan; Zheng Yang; Jarrod D. Milshtein; Bin Li; Chen Liao; Zhengcheng Zhang; Wei Wang; Jun Liu; Jeffery S. Moore; Fikile R. Brushett; Lu Zhang; Xiaoliang Wei