4.6 Article

V5+ degradation of sulfonated Radel membranes for vanadium redox flow batteries

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 15, Issue 27, Pages 11299-11305

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3cp52035h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Office of Electricity (OE Delivery & Energy Reliability (OE), U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)) [DE-AC05-76RL01830]
  2. Southern Pennsylvania Ben Franklin Commercialization Institute [001389-002]
  3. College of Earth and Mineral Sciences at The Pennsylvania State University

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Insight into the degradation mechanisms of aromatic proton conducting membrane separators for vanadium redox flow batteries (VRFBs) is urgently needed for the development of long lifetime VRFBs. Other than in-cell observations of performance degradation, there is little fundamental evidence on the specific degradation pathways of aromatic ion exchange membranes for VRFBs. Herein we investigated a sulfonated Radel (R) membrane (S-Radel) as the degradation target to study the degradation mechanism of aromatic polymers by V(v) (or generally V5+) oxidation. It was found that the ductile S-Radel membrane, which has a similar aromatic backbone structure to the most-studied polyaromatic VRFB membranes that have shown high performance, became brittle and discolored after 3 days of immersion in 1.7 M V(v) + 3.3 M H2SO4 solution at 40 degrees C. The membrane's intrinsic viscosity was reduced to about half of its original value after this exposure to V(v) while the ion exchange capacity did not change. In addition to chain scission, it was found that -OH groups were introduced to the backbone of S-Radel as the major degradation product. Quinone groups were also observed at 1677 cm(-1) in FTIR measurements. While the V(v) species in VRFBs is usually denoted as VO2+, V(v)=O in VOCl3 was found to not have degradation activity for S-Radel. Therefore, we hypothesized that there were other reactive forms of V(v) species that first attacked the S-Radel by incorporating hydroxyl groups into the polymer's aromatic backbone, followed by the oxidation of these hydroxyl groups to quinone functionalities through a redox mechanism.

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