1 research outputs found
Balancing Osmotic Pressure of Electrolytes for Nanoporous Membrane Vanadium Redox Flow Battery with a Draw Solute
Vanadium redox flow
batteries with nanoporous membranes (VRFBNM)
have been demonstrated to be good energy storage devices. Yet the
capacity decay due to permeation of vanadium and water makes their
commercialization very difficult. Inspired by the forward osmosis
(FO) mechanism, the VRFBNM battery capacity decrease was alleviated
by adding a soluble draw solute (e.g., 2-methylimidazole) into the
catholyte, which can counterbalance the osmotic pressure between the
positive and negative half-cell. No change of the electrolyte volume
has been observed after VRFBNM being operated for 55 h, revealing
that the permeation of water and vanadium ions was effectively limited.
Consequently, the Coulombic efficiency (CE) of nanoporous TiO<sub>2</sub> vanadium redox flow battery (VRFB) was enhanced from 93.5%
to 95.3%, meanwhile, its capacity decay was significantly suppressed
from 60.7% to 27.5% upon the addition of soluble draw solute. Moreover,
the energy capacity of the VRFBNM was noticeably improved from 297.0
to 406.4 mAh remarkably. These results indicate balancing the osmotic
pressure via the addition of draw solute can restrict pressure-dependent
vanadium permeation and it can be established as a promising method
for up-scaling VRFBNM application