The increasing concern on climate changes and air pollution accelerates the transformation of energy systems to be renewable. Compared to coal plants, nature clean power (solar or wind) has disadvantages of intermittent supply and uncontrollable instant power. Moreover, the supply period of nature power may not satisfy the requirements of users. As a result, energy storage plays a critical role in the renewable energy systems. As one of the most competitive candidates for large-scale energy storage, flow batteries (FBs) offer unique advantages of high efficiency, low cost, scalability and rapid response for grid energy storage. A flow battery comprises two electrolytes tanks—an anolyte tank and a catholyte tank for energy storage, a stack for power conversion, and two pumps to circulate the two electrolytes between the tanks and the stack. The stack includes an anode in contact with the anolyte, a cathode in contact with the catholyte, and a separator disposed between the anode and the cathode.
One major challenge for flow battery is the issue of crossover. Separators used in flow battery generally include an ion-exchange membrane, conducting charge-carrier ions and preventing crossover of active species. However, active species in anolyte/catholyte may still slowly diffuse through the separators to the opposite side, causing self-discharge and reducing the coulombic efficiency of the battery. In some flow battery systems, the active materials may have side reactions with the opposite electrode or the electrolyte, so that the crossover issues of active materials leads to irreversible capacity loss and eventually battery failure. Previously, many researchers investigated in solving the crossover issue by improving designs of the separators, including functionalization of membrane surfaces, pore-size control of nanoporous membranes, and coating on membrane surfaces. However, there is a dilemma between conductivity of the membrane and selectivity of the membrane. Solving crossover issue with high selectivity separator may lead to high polarization of flow battery, which reduces energy efficiency. Moreover, high cost of high-performance ion-exchange membranes may work against the economic feasibility of the flow batteries.
Zinc-iodine (Zn—I) flow batteries offer an advantage of symmetric electrolyte by utilizing both anion and cation of active materials to avoid crossover contamination. As a result, the Zn—I flow batteries may potentially use microporous membranes for separating anolyte and catholyte. Compared to the conventional cation-exchange membranes used in the flow batteries such as Nafion, the porous membranes provide benefits including significantly lower cost (about ⅕- 1/20 of the cost of the Nafion), higher ionic conductivities, higher mechanical strength and robustness against Zn dendrite penetrations. However, due to lack of selectivity, crossover of triiodide (I3—) or iodine-bromide (I2Br—) reduces coulombic efficiency of the Zn—I flow batteries and aggravates the dendrite problem. Suppression of iodine-crossover is a great challenge for the utilization of low-cost porous membrane separators in the Zn—I flow batteries.
The first Zn-ion (ZIB) battery proposed by B. Li et al[1]. had a high energy density of 167 Wh L−1 for catholyte, which was achieved by a 5M ZnI2 electrolyte and a Nafion cation exchange membrane1. During the charging processes of the ZIB battery, the iodide (I—) was first charged to form iodine molecule (I2) and the I2 was then coupled with a I— to form soluble triiodide I3—, as indicated by Equations (1)-(2). Therefore, the utilization of iodine was limited to ⅔ of the full capacity, and the current density was limited to a range of 5-20 mA cm−2 due to ohmic resistance of the Nafion separator.
C. Xie et al proposed a flow battery using a carbon-coated porous separator instead of the Nafion[2], improving the operation current density to a range of 80-180 mA cm−2. However, the crossover of I3— reduced coulombic efficiency (CE) at a low current density (90% CE at 60 mA cm−2).2
To fully utilize the capacity of iodine, a low-cost complex agent was reported to be added to form soluble complex with iodine. GM. Weng and coworkers used bromide additive to form iodine-bromide (I2Br—) instead of I3— as indicated by Equation (3), achieving a system energy density of 101 Wh L−1 by fully utilizing the iodine element[3].
Another way explored to improve the iodine utilization was by using precipitation reactions of I—/I2. X. Li et al. applied activated carbon (AC) as electrodes of the iodine-based batteries for adsorbing free iodine in the electrolyte, thereby improving reaction kinetics and inhibiting the crossover problem[4]. However, this method had a limited current density (˜2 mA cm−2) and areal capacity (<3 mAh cm−2), making the method more suitable for mobile electronics rather than for large-scale energy storage applications.
The formation of I3— in the catholyte is a reversible process. At high state-of-charge (SOC), the concentration of I— is low and the reaction tends to happen in the reversed direction, which may cause iodine precipitation that blocks the pipeline and leads to capacity loss. One possible way to solve the blocking problem is by adoption of single-flow battery architecture demonstrated by C. Xie and coworkers[5]. This architecture used non-flowing catholyte and iodine deposited on surfaces of the carbon electrode, achieving a high energy density of 200 Wh/L−1. However, the benefit came with a cost of sacrificing the advantage of decoupled energy and power in the flow battery, limiting the discharging time (<1 h). Moreover, the crossover issue was very serious when a porous polyolefin separator (CE 74% at 20 mA cm−2) was used, which may be improved by using a Nafion-coated separator (CE 92% at 20 mA cm−2).
Embodiments of the subject invention pertain to a flow battery system and methods for eliminating crossover issues of active materials in redox flow batteries. The adsorbent in electrolyte tank can improve coulombic efficiency of the flow battery system and methods. The flow battery system can comprise a stack, two tanks for anolyte and catholyte, respectively, and two pumps circulating electrolytes between the stack and the tanks. The stack comprises an anode configured to be in contact with the anolyte, a cathode configured to be in contact with the catholyte, and a separator interposed between anode and cathode. Solid adsorbents with a high specific surface area, for example, a specific surface area greater than 20 m2 g−1, are included in the flow battery system, adsorbing charged active material onto their surfaces. The adsorbent(s) is disposed in one or both tanks, in contact with liquid electrolyte(s). Outlet(s) of the electrolyte tank(s) may have a filter structure to keep the solid adsorbents within the tank(s). During a charging process, the charged active material is adsorbed and stored by the adsorbent in the electrolyte tank, so that the concentration of the charged active material in electrolyte is reduced, and the crossover issue is limited. During a discharging process, the concentration of the charged active material in electrolyte is reduced, thereby the active material stored on the surfaces of the adsorbent is desorbed into the electrolyte and then pumped into the stack to discharge.
According to an embodiment of the invention, a flow battery system can comprise a same anolyte and catholyte composition of zinc iodide (ZnI2) and supporting cations including Li+, Na+, K+ and/or NH4+, an adsorbent comprising activated carbon (AC) disposed to be in contact with the catholyte, an anode configured to be in contact with the anolyte, a cathode configured to be in contact with the catholyte; and a separator interposed between the anode and the cathode. The catholyte comprises triiodide (I3—) or iodine-bromide (I2Br—), during a charging process of the flow battery system, the triiodide (I3—) or iodine-bromide (I2Br—) is adsorbed and stored by the activated carbon in a form of solid I2; and during a discharging process of the flow battery system, the solid I2 is dissolved into the catholyte when a concentration of the I3−/I2Br− decreases. During the charging processes, the I3−/I2Br− formed is circulated from the cathode to the catholyte and adsorbed by the AC. During the discharging processes, when a concentration of the I2Br− decreases, the I2 on surfaces of the AC is dissolved by the bromide in the catholyte. The anolyte and the catholyte have a same composition of zinc, bromide and iodide salt. Moreover, the separator comprises a porous membrane. The separator is configured to allow migration of I− from the anolyte to the catholyte such that capacity of the flow battery system is increased. The catholyte or anolyte comprises polyethylene glycol (PEG) as an electrolyte additive, which forms complex with I3−/I2Br− and deposits on surfaces of the membrane so that the crossover is further suppressed. The synergistic effect of AC and PEG achieved high utilization of iodine of approximately 100% and a high coulombic efficiency of about 95%.
Embodiments of the subject invention provide novel and advantageous flow battery systems and methods for eliminating crossover of active materials in redox flow batteries. Crossover refers to transportation of redox active species across ion exchange membrane leading to self-discharge, irreversible reaction, low coulombic efficiency, and capacity decay.
This invention solves the crossover problem by having adsorbents disposed in the electrolyte tank in contact with the electrolyte, as shown in
The adsorbents configurations for controlling the crossover issue can be applied to many different types of flow battery systems. The adsorbent can be either activated carbon, silica gel, zeolite, metal sulfide, polymer matrix, or metal-organic frameworks, and the adsorbing active materials can include halogen, sulfide/polysulfide, transition metal ions, and organic molecules. The form of adsorbent can be either a particle, a pellet, fabric or porous bulk. The electrolyte tank may have a filter structure to keep all the adsorbents in the electrolyte tank without being flushed into the external tubes and the stack.
Utilization of low-cost high-conductivity separators facilitates controlling of crossover. In some embodiments, the anolyte and the catholyte may have a same composition. With adsorbents in tank, a high coulombic efficiency can be achieved with porous non-selective separator, providing advantages of high conductivity and low cost.
In one embodiment, a zinc-iodine adsorption-aided flow battery (ZIAB) system comprises activated carbon (AC) as adsorbents in a container and a low-cost porous separator. The I3-/I2Br— is catholyte of the ZIAB system is adsorbed and stored by the activated carbon in a form of solid I2 in the container during the charging processes of the ZIAB system, while the solid I2 is dissolved into the catholyte when a concentration of I3-/I2Br— decreases during the discharging processes.
As a result, the concentration of the I3-/I2Br— in catholyte is reduced at high SOC, inhibiting the crossover issue. Since the iodine is stored as solid I2 in the container, utilizations of the iodine as high as almost 100% in catholyte can be realized. Further, a high coulombic efficiency of 95% can be achieved with the AC in the container when polyethylene glycol (PEG) is used as an electrolyte additive.
Moreover, the activated carbon limits precipitation reactions of iodine in the container, inhibiting the pipe-blocking problem caused by the solid iodine. Thus, the subject invention offers advantages of decoupled energy and power for a flow battery, leading to low-cost, scalable, and reliable energy storage applications.
When the term “about” is used herein, in conjunction with a numerical value, it is understood that the value can be in a range of 90% of the value to 110% of the value, i.e. the value can be +/−10% of the stated value. For example, “about 1 kg” means from 0.90 kg to 1.1 kg.
In one embodiment, the anolyte and catholyte of the flow battery system have a composition of zinc, bromide and iodide salt as shown in Table 1. The AC particles are immersed in a container such as a tank containing the catholyte and flowed through by the catholyte. A filter may be installed at the outlet of the catholyte container, inhibiting carbon particles from getting into the pipelines of the flow battery system.
During the charging processes of the Zn—I adsorption-aided flow battery system, the I3−/I2Br− formed is carried from the cathode to the catholyte container and adsorbed by the AC as shown in Equation (4), thereby limiting a concentration of the I2Br− in the catholyte and inhibiting the crossover by diffusion.
During the discharging processes of the Zn—I adsorption-aided flow battery system, when the concentration of I2Br− decreases, the I2 on surfaces of the AC are dissolved by the bromide in the catholyte, flowing into the stack of the Zn—I adsorption-aided flow battery system for the discharge processes.
Moreover, with the adsorption-based flow battery system and methods, a high coulombic efficiency can be achieved. and a low-cost, non-selective porous separator can be employed. Furthermore, the issue of I2leakage to the environment can be inhabited. As the porous separator allows migration of I− from the anolyte to the catholyte of the Zn—I adsorption-aided flow battery system, the in the anolyte leads to an increase of the capacity of the flow battery system.
In one embodiment, the anolyte and/or catholyte container contains a filter structure as shown in
Now referring to
To illustrate the effects of the adsorption employed by the subject invention, performance of one Zn—I adsorption-aided flow battery system with the AC in the container is compared with performance of one Zn—I adsorption-aided flow battery system without the AC in the container. Each side of the two battery systems contains 15 mL 2M KI with 1M ZnBr2 electrolyte, and the AC weights 80% of the iodine element.
Remarkable differences in cycling performances of the two battery systems are observed in
There is a 6.4 Ah L−1 difference between the 1st and the 2nd charging capacity, which is not observed in subsequent cycles. The difference may be attributed to the irreversible AC adsorption of iodine in the 1st cycle.
It is also noted that such CE is achieved with high areal Zn plating capacity over 75 mAh cm−2 and long discharging time over 3 hours 45 minutes. In the 2nd cycle, the coulombic efficiency of the battery system without the AC drops to <10%, while the charging voltage also dramatically drops, which may be due to a serious formation of dendrite on the Zn electrode as shown in
The 1st-cycle charging voltage of the battery system without the AC is higher than that of the battery system with the AC, which may be contributed by a higher concentration of I3−/I2Br− in catholyte. The hypothesis was verified by the UV-vis adsorption test of the fully charged electrolyte shown in
Moreover, the adsorption peak of iodine commonly seen in an iodine flow battery is not observed for the battery system with the AC, proving the effectiveness of iodine adsorption by the AC in the container of the battery system. The discharge capacity of the AC is greater than 30 Ah L−1, considering both anolyte volume and the catholyte volume. It is noted that the theoretical capacity of iodine in catholyte is only 26.8 Wh L−1, indicating that the iodine in the anolyte also contributes to the capacity increase.
Although the AC adsorption significantly improves the performance of Zn—I battery with porous membrane, the low CE, low energy efficiency and dendrite issue still cannot satisfy the requirements of realistic applications. To overcome the challenges, polyethylene glycol (PEG) as additive is introduced to the flow battery system of the subject invention.
It is well known that PEG as electrolyte additive can suppress Zn dendrite formation and hydrogen evolution, which is commonly used in Zn plating and Zn flow batteries[6-8]. However, in the Zn—I flow batteries, PEG forms complex with I3− at high SOC and the complex is an insoluble dark semisolid precipitation blocking ionic tunnels in the microporous separator, causing resistance increase for ionic transfer. The AC adsorbent in the tank limits the concentration of I3−/I2Br− in electrolyte, which controls the thickness of PEG-I complex deposition. The mechanism of PEG additive in adsorption-aided Zn—I flow battery is shown in
As shown in
The separator-blocking problem by PEG can be solved by the AC adsorption of the subject invention. In one embodiment, the AC is added into the catholyte tank of the flow cell with 1% vol PEG400 (weighting 90% of iodine in catholyte). As shown in
In one embodiment, referring to
At high SOC, PEG-I complex formed in the catholyte container may fix more free-I3−/I2Br− on surfaces of the AC, further suppressing the crossover issue. A CE greater than 95% can be achieved for current densities in a range of 20-40 mA cm−2 as shown in
In one embodiment, to further improve rate performance of the flow battery system, ammonium bromide (NH4Br), instead of KBr, may be adopted as supporting electrolyte for its better ionic conductivity. The voltage efficiency of the flow battery system drops from 82.9% to 62.3%, when the current density increases from 20 mA cm−2 to 80 mA cm−2 as shown in
To evaluate the economic impacts of the adsorption-aided flow battery system, a cost model described by R. M. Darling et al.[9], with mineral price information published by the U. S. Geological Survey (USGC) is utilized. The calculation is based on the assumption of building a 2-h energy storage system, which is a favored configuration for energy storage application for solar power and wind farms. The estimated costs of battery component are listed in Table 2.
Although the energy cost is increased by 10.6% due to the extra cost of the activated carbon adsorbent, the system cost of the Zn—I flow battery with the adsorption-aided design is decreased by 15.3%, showing the economic competitiveness of the system and methods of the subject invention.
Materials
ZnI2 (Aladdin Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd., 98%), ZnBr2 (Xinbao Fine Chemical Factory, 98%), KI (Aladdin Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd., 99%), NH4Br (Aladdin Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd., 99%), Activated carbon by wood (Fuzhou Y H-Carbon Co. Ltd., #8-25, I value 950-1000), PEG (Aladdin Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd., Mn 400), PTFE porous separator (Haining Yibo Filter Co. Ltd., pore size 0.1 μm hydrophilic), Polymer nonwoven cloth (Mitsubishi Paper Mills Co. Ltd., 150 μm), Zn plate (Hebei Shengshida Metal Co. Ltd., 0.1 mm), and copper foam (Shanghai Yinfu Metal Co. Ltd., 2 mm) are used as received. Carbon felt (Beijing Jinglong Te Tan Co. Ltd., 3 mm) was heated in air at 500° C. for 5 hours. All the electrolytes are prepared with deionized water.
Flow Battery Assembly
A schematic representation of the flow stack internal structure of the flow cell is shown in
Electrochemical Tests
The battery testing station is a model CT3001A supplied by Wuhan Lanhe Technology Co. Ltd. For the test of electrolyte sample K—C0 in
All patents, patent applications, provisional applications, and publications referred to or cited herein are incorporated by reference in their entirety, including all figures and tables, to the extent they are not inconsistent with the explicit teachings of this specification.
It should be understood that the examples and embodiments described herein are for illustrative purposes only and that various modifications or changes in light thereof will be suggested to persons skilled in the art and are to be included within the spirit and purview of this application and the scope of the appended claims. In addition, any elements or limitations of any invention or embodiment thereof disclosed herein can be combined with any and/or all other elements or limitations (individually or in any combination) or any other invention or embodiment thereof disclosed herein, and all such combinations are contemplated with the scope of the invention without limitation thereto.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20190103600 | Greer | Apr 2019 | A1 |
20210111424 | Park | Apr 2021 | A1 |
Entry |
---|
Li, B. et al., “Ambipolar zinc-polyiodide electrolyte for a high-energy density aqueous redox flow battery”, Nature Communications, 2015, pp. 1-8, Macmillan Publishers Limited. |
Xie, C. et al., “A Long Cycle Life, Self-Healing Zinc-Iodine Flow Battery with High Power Density”, Communications, Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 2018, 57:1-7, Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim. |
Weng, G.M. et al., “Unlocking the capacity of iodide for high-energy-density zinc/polyiodide and lithium/polyiodide redox flow batteries”, Energy & Environmental Science, 2017, 10:735-741, The Royal Society of Chemistry. |
Pan, H. et al., “Controlling Solid-Liquid Conversion Reactions for a Highly Reversible Aqueous Zinc-Iodine Battery”, ACS Energy Letters, 2017, 2:2674-2680, American Chemical Society. |
Xie, C. et al., “Highly stable zinc-iodine single flow batteries with super high energy density for stationary energy storage”, Energy & Environmental Science, 2019, 12:1834-1839, The Royal Society of Chemistry. |
Ballesteros, J.C. et al., “Zinc electrodeposition in the presence of polyethylene glycol 20000”, Electrochimica Acta, 2007, 52:3686-3696, 2006 Elsevier Ltd. |
Kim, J.W. et al., “Effects of Organic Additives on Zinc Electrodeposition at Iron Electrodes Studied by EQCM and in Situ STM”, Langmuir, 2004, 20:459-466, American Chemical Society. |
Sun, K.E.K. et al., “Suppression of Dendrite Formation and Corrosion on Zinc Anode of Secondary Aqueous Batteries”, ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, 2017, 9:9681-9687, American Chemical Society. |
Darling, R.M. et al., “Pathways to low-cost electrochemical energy storage: a comparison of aqueous and nonaqueous flow batteries”, Energy & Environmental Science, 2014, 7:3459-3477, The Royal Society of Chemistry. |
Fan, Y. et al., “Economic analysis of flow battery energy storage for wind farm application”, Energy Storage Science and Technology, May 2020, 9(3):725-729, along with an English Abstract. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20220085401 A1 | Mar 2022 | US |