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New liquid battery could break solar storage barrier for Aussie homes

Monash University 2 mins read

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Engineers have developed a water-based battery that could help Australian households store rooftop solar energy more safely, cheaply and efficiently than ever before.

Their next-generation “flow battery” opens the door to compact, high-performance battery systems for homes, and is expected to be much cheaper than current $10,000 lithium-ion systems.

Flow batteries have been around for decades but have traditionally been used in large-scale energy storage due to their large size and slow charge speeds. 

Wanqiao Liang, the study’s first author and PhD candidate at the Department of Materials Science and Engineering,  said the team’s new membrane design fixes the speed problem making it ideal for households and a promising key player in the energy transition market.

“We’ve taken a safe, affordable chemistry and made it fast enough to capture rooftop solar in real time,” Ms Liang said.

“We’ve engineered a membrane that finally makes organic flow batteries competitive for residential and mid-scale storage. It opens the door to systems that are not only cheaper, but also safer and simpler to scale.”

While some companies already produce flow batteries, Monash’s design stands out for its combination of safety, low cost and high-speed performance – a balance few systems around the world have achieved.

“The key was improving ion selectivity; letting the good ions through quickly while keeping unwanted ones out. Our new membrane achieves this balance, allowing fast, stable operation even at high current densities,” Ms Liang said.

“We outperformed the industry-standard Nafion membrane in both speed and stability – running 600 high-current cycles with virtually no capacity loss – that’s a major leap forward for this kind of battery.”

Wanqiao said a careful balance was crucial to making these batteries work for rooftop solar at home.

“This is the kind of battery you’d want in your garage,” Ms Liang said.

“It’s non-toxic, non-flammable, and made from abundant materials, all while keeping up with solar power on a sunny day.”

The team is now 3D printing prototype systems and testing them under real-world conditions. 

“If the prototypes keep performing the way we expect, this could be on the market in a few years’ time,” Ms Liang said.

Flow batteries store energy in liquids rather than solid materials like those found in lithium-ion batteries, making them cheaper to manufacture, safer to operate and easier to scale.

“We’ve developed a new type of membrane inside the battery that guides the flow of materials better – kind of like adding lanes to a highway. That means faster charging, longer battery life and better performance overall,” Ms Liang said.

In 2018, Monash installed a 1MWh redT energy (now known as Invinity energy) storage system – the largest behind-the-meter commercial setup in Australia and the first of its kind globally – as a core part of the microgrid at its Clayton campus. The Monash microgrid plays a central role in the University’s goal to become 100 per cent energy self-sufficient and is a key part of achieving Net Zero emissions by 2030.

Now, Monash is home to the next big leap in clean energy storage.

Monash’s flow-battery membrane breakthrough - key facts:

  • Safe: water-based, non-flammable liquids

  • Low-cost: expected to be significantly cheaper than current $10,000 lithium-ion home systems

  • Sustainable: made from abundant materials without critical minerals like lithium or cobalt

  • Flexible: suitable for households, commercial buildings, and large-scale energy storage

DOI: doi.org/10.1002/anie.202505383

-ENDS-

MEDIA ENQUIRIES:

Courtney Karayannis, Media and Communications Manager

Monash University

T: +61 408 508 454 or [email protected] 

 

Monash University Media | +613 9903 4840 | [email protected]

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