This invention relates to a cyclable laminar flow battery having flow-through porous electrodes along with a non-ion-perm-selective element called a “dispersion blocker” to inhibit local convection.
Laminar flow fuel cells are known in the prior art, which includes Ferrigno et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2002, 124 (44), pp. 12930-12931; Choban et al., J. Power Sources 128, 54-60 (2004); Kjeang et al., US 2009/0092882; Peled et al., US 2012/0308907 and 2012/0308911; Braff, US/2012/0070766; and Cho et al., Journal of the Electrochemical Society, 2012. These cells are “membraneless” because laminar flow is used to keep reactants at one electrode from crossing over to the opposite electrode, without the use of a standard ion-perm-selective membrane barrier, as in most fuel cells and batteries.
These systems are mostly referred to as membraneless, laminar-flow “fuel cells” since they only support galvanic discharge operation and are not able to electrolytically recharge in closed-loop operation. Indeed, no prior flow battery system has been disclosed that can achieve stable closed-loop cycling with a membraneless laminar flow architecture. Most of the prior art also involves planar “flow-over” electrodes, although Cho discloses a flow-through cathode in a system with a solid ion exchange membrane. Most of the prior art also does not include attempts to control convection in the laminar flow channel, although Stroock et al., US 2008/0008911 and DaMota et al., Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012, disclose convection barriers in flow batteries that are not used with porous media or to inhibit dispersion.
The invention discloses a membraneless flow battery with at least one flow-through porous electrode. In a preferred embodiment, the flow battery according to the invention includes a porous anode for receiving a fuel and an open or porous electrolyte channel for transporting an electrolyte adjacent to the porous anode. A flow-through porous cathode for transporting an oxidant is provided, and a porous dispersion blocker is disposed between the electrolyte channel and the porous cathode, which inhibits convective mixing while allowing molecular diffusion of ions and mean fluid flow to pass through it. The porous dispersion blocker is not ion-perm-selective, in that both positive and negative ions may freely diffuse through its structure.
In a preferred embodiment, the porous anode, the porous electrolyte channel and the porous cathode have varying pore structure properties selected for tuning advective dispersion, conductivity or other macroscopic properties. The varying pore structure properties may have a smooth or discontinuous gradient in properties such as pore size distribution, loop size or pore shape.
The porous dispersion blocker, in a preferred embodiment, has a pore structure different from the pore structure of the porous anode, the porous electrolyte channel and porous cathode. In one preferred embodiment, the pores in the dispersion blocker are at least two times smaller in mean diameter than pores in the porous anode, porous electrolyte channel and porous cathode.
The flow battery of the invention may further include structure for introducing an electrolyte into the porous electrolyte channel and an oxidant into the porous cathode. The electrolyte and oxidant flows may be in the same direction or in an opposite direction. Such counterflow operation maximizes pressure drop across the electrolyte and cathode inlets.
In yet another embodiment, the laminar flow battery further includes circuitry to measure in real time voltage and current of the battery to modulate electrolyte and oxidant flow rates to optimize power output and reactant utilization.
A suitable battery chemistry is hydrogen-bromine, as will be appreciated by those of skill in the art. Many other flow battery chemistries are also possible, such as zinc-bromine, lithium-oxygen, lithium-ion, sodium-ion, vanadium redox, quinone redox, etc.
a, b and c are graphs showing the equilibrium performance for single pass operation with fresh reactant and electrolyte streams.
a and b are graphs of voltage and voltage efficiency versus cycle number.
a, b and c illustrate numerical results showing predicted coulombic efficiency of the battery disclosed herein. The latter demonstrate the potential of our system to achieve high coulombic efficiency despite having no ion exchange element.
The present invention is a flow battery with porous electrodes that uses heterogeneous porous media to comprise a liquid flow-through electrode and does not require an ion exchange element to enable cyclable energy storage and to reduce mixing of reactant streams. The present invention is thus a departure from prior art flow batteries that use homogeneous porous media for liquid electrodes and/or heterogeneous porous media only for gas electrodes. Further, our battery enables two or three-dimensional laminar flow, a departure from previous battery systems which are either one-dimensional (the most typical) and three-dimensional chaotic flow batteries.
With reference now to
The porous anode 12 and the porous cathode 16 may have varying pore structure properties that can allow for tuning advective dispersion, conductivity and other macroscopic properties of the porous media. The porous structures 12 and 16 may have a smooth or discontinuous gradient in properties such as pore size distribution, loop site or pore shape in order to affect local flow and concentration fields.
The dispersion blocker 20 is a thin layer that inhibits local flow through its thickness. The pore structure of the dispersion blocker 20 is different from the abutting porous media such that advective mixing through the dispersion blocker 20 is inhibited while mean flow is uninhibited. In a preferred embodiment, the dispersion blocker has pores that are at least two times smaller in mean diameter than pores of the abutting porous media. Typically, the dispersion blocker 20 has small pores (<1 μm). A suitable dispersion blocker is a microporous polymeric material such as polypropylene or PTFE.
In this embodiment the electrolyte (inert liquid) and oxidant (liquid reactant solution) flow in the same direction and mixing is minimized through the presence of the dispersion blocker 20. The electrolyte flows through the open channel 14 in between the porous anode 12 and the dispersion blocker 20. The dispersion blocker 20 contains a pore structure that varies from the rest of the liquid electrode, and is not ion selective as are commonly used ion exchange membranes. The variation in pore structure achieves a reduction in crossover flux due to dispersion and diffusive sources, and so enables high coulombic efficiency operation without the requirement for ion exchange membranes. Further, the dispersion blocker 20 inhibits advection of solvent, and enables a pressure drop across its bulk. As such, the velocities and pressures of the two liquid flows do not have to be matched, and can be tuned independently for optimized performance.
It should be clear to those skilled in the art that many different types of porous media could be used in different embodiments of the invention. For example, the dispersion blocker and adjacent porous electrode and/or porous electrolyte could be made from a monolithic solid porous material with varying pore structure, such as porous ceramics made from sintering or pressing layers of particles with different sizes and chemical compositions, such as alumina, silica, zirconia, grains or fiberglass for the electrolyte or dispersion blocker layers; porous polymeric materials made by functionalizing, crosslinking, or curing powders of polymeric particles of different compositions and sizes, such as PTFE or PE; porous materials and mats made by electrospinning or electrospraying; composite porous materials with conformal polymeric coatings throughout the bulk or in surface layers made by dip or spray layer-by-layer deposition of charged polymers in order to decrease pore size and control surface properties; porous metallic materials made from foams, aerogels, crosslinked or fused particles such as carbon, MXene, graphite, nickel, platinum, titanium, copper, gold, aluminum, or other metallic nanotubes, fibers, and flakes.
a, b and c are graphs of experiments showing single pass performance and power density of a battery according to an embodiment of the invention based on hydrogen-bromine electrochemistry. During discharge, hydrogen gas is fed to a porous anode with platinum catalyst and oxidized to protons in hydrobromic acid electrolyte, while liquid bromine and tribromide ions dissolved in hydrobromic acid are fed to a flow-through porous carbon paper cathode without any catalyst. A thin celgard polyethylene layer plays the role of the dispersion blocker between the porous cathode and an open electrolyte channel, defined by spacers. The power density achieved and voltage efficiency achieved are shown.
In another aspect, the invention uses real-time measurements of the voltage and/or current of a membrane-less electrochemical cell to individually modulate the electrolyte and reactant flow rates to optimize power output and reactant utilization. In particular, the amount of reactant fed into the cell is modulated while maintaining a constant total flow rate to maximize reactant utilization. The reactant feed may be modulated while maintaining a constant total flow rate to minimize reactant cross over.
It is recognized that modifications and variations of the invention disclosed herein will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art and it is intended that all such variations and modifications be included within the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims priority to provisional application Ser. No. 61/886,122 filed on Oct. 3, 2013, the contents of which are incorporate herein by reference in their entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4520081 | Hohne | May 1985 | A |
5304432 | Townsend | Apr 1994 | A |
20080008911 | Strook et al. | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20080070083 | Markoski | Mar 2008 | A1 |
20090035644 | Markoski | Feb 2009 | A1 |
20090092882 | Kjeang et al. | Apr 2009 | A1 |
20100112391 | Salloum | May 2010 | A1 |
20100248068 | Sekino | Sep 2010 | A1 |
20110045385 | Makita | Feb 2011 | A1 |
20120070766 | Braff et al. | Mar 2012 | A1 |
20120308907 | Peled et al. | Dec 2012 | A1 |
20120308911 | Peled et al. | Dec 2012 | A1 |
20130209916 | Kim | Aug 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
101318331 | Oct 2013 | KR |
Entry |
---|
El-kharouf et al., Ex-situ characterisation of gas diffusion layers for proton exchange membrane fuel cells, Aug. 2012, Journal of Power Sources, 218, 393-404. |
Thorson et al., Design rules for electrode arrangement in an air-breathing alkaline direct methanol laminar flow fuel cell, Jun. 2012, Journal of Power Sources, 218, 28-33. |
Hollinger et al., Nanoporous separator and low fuel concentration to minimize crossover in direct methanol laminar flow fuel cells, Dec. 2009, Journal of Power Sources, 195, 3523-3528. |
Notification of Transmittal of International Search Report and the Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority for PCT?US2014/058955, dated Mar. 10, 2015. |
Notification Concerning Transmittal of International Preliminary Report on Patentability for PCT/US2014/058955 dated Apr. 14, 2016. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20150099199 A1 | Apr 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61886122 | Oct 2013 | US |