An Investigation of the Ionic Conductivity and Species Crossover of Lithiated Nafion 117 in Nonaqueous Electrolytes
Author(s)
Darling, Robert M.; Gallagher, Kevin G.; Xie, Wei; Thelen, Jacob L.; Cheng, Kevin J.; Balsara, Nitash P.; Moore, Jeffrey S.; Su, Liang; Badel, Andres F.; Barton, John Leonard; Brushett, Fikile R; ... Show more Show less
DownloadBrushett_an investigation.pdf (601.6Kb)
PUBLISHER_CC
Publisher with Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Nonaqueous redox flow batteries are a fast-growing area of research and development motivated by the need to develop low-cost energy storage systems. The identification of a highly conductive, yet selective membrane, is of paramount importance to enabling such a technology. Herein, we report the swelling behavior, ionic conductivity, and species crossover of lithiated Nafion 117 membranes immersed in three nonaqueous electrolytes (PC, PC : EC, and DMSO). Our results show that solvent volume fraction within the membrane has the greatest effect on both conductivity and crossover. An approximate linear relationship between diffusive crossover of neutral redox species (ferrocene) and the ionic conductivity of membrane was observed. As a secondary effect, the charge on redox species modifies crossover rates in accordance with Donnan exclusion. The selectivity of membrane is derived mathematically and compared to experimental results reported here. The relatively low selectivity for lithiated Nafion 117 in nonaqueous conditions suggests that new membranes are required for competitive nonaqueous redox flow batteries to be realized. Potential design rules are suggested for the future membrane engineering work.
Date issued
2015-12Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical EngineeringJournal
Journal of The Electrochemical Society
Publisher
Electrochemical Society
Citation
Su, Liang et al. “An Investigation of the Ionic Conductivity and Species Crossover of Lithiated Nafion 117 in Nonaqueous Electrolytes.” Journal of The Electrochemical Society 163.1 (2016): A5253–A5262.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0013-4651
1945-7111