Blending polybenzimidazole with an anion exchange polymer increases the efficiency of vanadium redox flow batteries
- Authors
- Jung, Mina; Lee, Wonmi; Noh, Chanho; Konovalova, Anastasiia; Yi, Gyu Seong; Kim, Sangwon; Kwon, Yongchai; Henkensmeier, Dirk
- Issue Date
- 2019-06
- Publisher
- ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
- Citation
- JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE, v.580, pp.110 - 116
- Abstract
- PBI membranes are recently discussed as stable, well performing membranes for vanadium redox flow batteries (VRFB). Blending meta-PBI with an anion exchange polymer (FAA3i) slightly reduces the coulomb efficiency from 99.7 to 97.8%, but strongly increases the voltage efficiency from 82.5 to 88.2%, leading to an increased energy efficiency (86.2% at 80mAcm(-2)), exceeding that of meta-PBI (82.2%) and N212 (83%). Apparently, since the conductivity of sulfuric acid has a maximum around a concentration of 3.8 M, the concentration of the absorbed acid has a dominant influence on the conductivity. Addition of FAA3i decreases the concentration of the acid absorbed by PBI membranes. Furthermore, an ex-situ stability test in 1.5M V5+ solutions in 2M sulfuric acid for 87 days showed a very high stability for meta-PBI and Nafion 212, while the commercial FAA3 membrane disintegrated into pieces. Blending of meta-PBI and FAA3 decreased the stability, as proven by formation of V4+, but all tested blend membranes retained their membrane shape and could still be handled. Blending with FAA3 reduces the tensile strength and Young's modulus of meta-PBI, and doping with sulfuric acid leads to a further decrease in the mechanical strength. However, an acid doped PF-21 still showed a tensile strength of 37 MPa and a Young's modulus of 0.7 GPa.
- Keywords
- SULFURIC-ACID; PERFORMANCE ENHANCEMENT; COULOMBIC EFFICIENCY; POROUS MEMBRANES; HIGH SELECTIVITY; CONDUCTIVITY; STABILITY; ELECTROCATALYST; VRFB; Polybenzimidazole; FAA3; Blend membranes
- ISSN
- 0376-7388
- URI
- https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/119935
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.memsci.2019.03.014
- Appears in Collections:
- KIST Article > 2019
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