A key bottleneck to society’s transition to renewable energy is the lack of cost-effective energy storage systems. Hydrogen–bromine redox flow batteries are seen as a promising solution, due to the use of low-cost reactants and highly conductive electrolytes, but market penetration is prevented due to high capital costs, for example due to costly membranes to prevent bromine crossover. Membraneless hydrogen–bromine cells relying on colaminar flows have thus been investigated, showing high power density nearing 1 W/cm 2 . However, no detailed breakdown of resistance losses has been performed to-date, a knowledge gap which impedes further progress. Here, we characterize such a battery, showing the main sources of loss are the porous cathode, due to both Faradaic and Ohmic losses, followed by Ohmic losses in the electrolyte channel, with all other sources relatively minor contributors. We further develop and fit analytical expressions for the impedance of porous electrodes in high power density electrochemical cells to impedance measurements from our battery, which enabled the detailed cell resistance breakdown and determination of important electrode parameters such as volumetric exchange current density and specific capacitance. The insights developed here will enable improved engineering designs to unlock exceptionally high-power density membraneless flow batteries.
Widespread adoption of redox flow batteries (RFBs) for renewable energy storage is inhibited by a relatively high cost of storage. This is due largely to typical RFBs requiring two flows, two external tanks, and expensive ion‐exchange membranes. Here, we propose a potentially inexpensive Zn‐Br2 RFB which is membraneless and requires only a single flow. The flow is an emulsion consisting of a continuous, Br2‐poor aqueous phase and a dispersed, Br2‐rich polybromide phase, pumped through the channel separating anode and cathode. With our prototype cell, we explore the effect of polybromide‐phase volume fraction and Br2 concentration on cell performance and plating efficiencies. We demonstrate high discharge currents of up to 270 mA/cm2, plating efficiencies up to 88 %, and dendriteless plating up to the highest Zn loading investigated of 250 mAh/cm2. We provide mechanistic insights into cell behavior and elucidate paths towards unlocking ultra‐low‐cost single‐flow RFBs with multiphase flow.
The high proton conductivity of proton exchange membranes (PEMs) made of Nafion® is attributed to a random 3D network of elongated water channels formed by bundles of rod‐like inverted micelles. Alignment of bundles, e.g., by stretching, is known to significantly enhance the in‐plane conductivity, yet achieving alignment normal to the membrane surface, desired for most applications, is challenging. A few attempts to obtain such alignment by confining Nafion in nanometric trans‐membrane pores of solid anodized aluminium oxide (AAO) membranes were reported, so far with limited success. Here we demonstrate that considerable pore filling of AAO with 200 nm pores by Nafion could be achieved through (i) use of Nafion concentrations below the threshold concentration C*, above which Nafion molecules form large aggregates; and (ii) control of filling rate through a combination of thermal and vacuum evaporation of Nafion solution through the membrane. The proton conductivity and NaCl diffusion permeability (sodium chloride diffusivity) tested by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy demonstrated superior intrinsic conductivity and selectivity of the composite membrane as compared to commercial Nafion membranes.
Suspension electrodes are under intense investigation due to their use in electrochemical systems such as redox flow batteries, capacitive deionization cells and flow supercapacitors. They provide novel functionalities not available with static electrodes, such as spatial power-energy decoupling for flow hybrid batteries, and continuous water desalination by capacitive deionization cells. Yet their electric conductivity is low relative to static electrodes made of the same material. It was previously found that suspension electrodes employing multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) demonstrate among the highest electric conductivities in deionized water, yet the effect of electrolyte ionic strength on their electric conductivity of was not elucidated. We here measure the electric conductivity of MWCNTs suspensions in a KBr electrolyte under flow using two-and four-electrode setups with alternative and direct current (DC) techniques. Only the two-electrode DC technique measured solely electronic conductivity, while all the other techniques measured the combined ionic and electronic conductivity. The electronic conductivity increased with MWCNT concentration in accordance with percolation theory power law. It increased also with electrolyte concentration by one to two orders of magnitude, with the critical exponent value transitioning from ∼2 to ∼1 with the increasing KBr concentration, which was explained in terms of the Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek theory.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.