Molecular Engineering of Polyoxovanadate-Alkoxide Clusters and Microporous Polymer Membranes to Prevent Crossover in Redox-Flow Batteries
Author(s) -
Eric Schreiber,
Rachel E. Garwick,
Miranda J. Baran,
Michael A. Baird,
Brett A. Helms,
Ellen M. Matson
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.1c23205
Subject(s) - materials science , microporous material , redox , polymer , membrane , nanotechnology , alkoxide , chemical engineering , smart material , organic chemistry , catalysis , chemistry , metallurgy , composite material , biochemistry , engineering
The ongoing development of redox-active charge carriers for nonaqueous redox-flow batteries has led to energy-dense storage concepts and chemistries with high cell voltages. However, rarely are these candidates for flowable energy storage evaluated in tandem with cell separators compatible with organic solvent, limiting progress in the identification of suitable charge carrier-separator pairings. This is important, as the efficiency of a redox-flow battery is dictated by extent of active species crossover through a separator, dividing the two cells, and the contribution of the separator to cell resistance. Here, we report the size-dependent crossover behavior of a series of redox-active vanadium(III) acetoacetonate, and two polyoxovanadate-alkoxide clusters, [V 6 O 7 (OR) 12 ] (R = CH 3 , C 5 H 11 ) through separators derived from polymers of intrinsic microporosity (PIMs). We find that highly efficacious active-material blocking requires both increasing the size of the vanadium species and restricting pore swelling of the PIMs in nonaqueous electrolyte. Notably, increasing the size of the vanadium species does not significantly affect its redox reversibility, and reducing swelling decreases the conductivity of the separator by only 50%. By pairing polyoxometalate clusters with PIM membranes in nonaqueous redox-flow batteries, more efficient systems may well be within reach.
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