4.8 Article

A Low-Cost and High-Performance Sulfonated Polyimide Proton-Conductive Membrane for Vanadium Redox Flow/Static Batteries

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 9, Issue 38, Pages 32643-32651

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b07437

Keywords

vanadium redox battery; side-chain-type fluorinated sulfonated polyimide; membrane; proton selectivity; chemical stability

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Plan Project [2017YFB0903502]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51772332, 51372278]
  3. Science and Technology Major Special Project of Hunan Province [2016GK1003-1]
  4. Innovation-Driven Project of Central South University [2016CXS031]
  5. Science and Technology Project of SGCC Key techniques research of ion exchange membrane for vanadium redox flow battery

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A novel side-chain-type fluorinated sulfonated polyimide (s-FSPI) membrane is synthesized for vanadium redox batteries (VRBs) by high-temperature polycondensation and grafting reactions. The s-FSPI membrane has a vanadium ion permeability that is over an order of magnitude lower and has a proton selectivity that is 6.8 times higher compared to those of the Nafion 115 membrane. The s-FSPI membrane possesses superior chemical stability compared to most of the linear sulfonated aromatic polymer membranes reported for VRBs. Also, the vanadium redox flow/static batteries (VRFB/VRSB) assembled with the s-FSPI membranes exhibit stable battery performance over 100-and 300-time charge discharge Cycling tests, respectively, with significantly higher battery efficiencies and lower self-discharge rates than those with the Nafion 115 membranes. The excellent physicochemical properties and VRB performance of the s-FSPI membrane could be attributed to the specifically designed molecular structure with the hydrophobic trifluoromethyl groups and flexible sulfoalkyl pendants being introduced on the main chains of the membrane. Moreover, the cost of the s-FSPI membrane is only one-fourth that of the commercial Nafion 115 membrane. This work opens up new possibilities for fabricating high-performance proton-conductive membranes at low costs for VRBs.

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