Abstract
The double-layer membrane consisting of sulfonated poly(ether sulfone) (SPES) sub-layer and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) sub-layer (denoted as SPES/PVA membrane) was prepared and employed as the separator for vanadium redox flow battery (VRB) system to evaluate the vanadium ions permeability and cell performance. The SPES/PVA membrane is a double-layer structure and exhibits dramatically lower vanadium ions permeability and better cell performance compared to the pristine SPES membrane, PVA membrane, and Nafion117 membrane. The vanadium ion permeability of SPES/PVA membrane is one order of magnitude lower than that of Nafion117 membrane. In further work, the single cell with SPES/PVA membrane showed significantly lower capacity loss, higher coulombic efficiency (>92.5%), and higher energy efficiency (>83.9%) than Nafion117 membrane. In the self-discharge test, SPES/PVA membrane showed 1.8 times longer duration in the open circuit decay than Nafion117 membrane. With all the good properties and low cost, this new kind of double-layer membrane is suggested to have excellent commercial prospects as an ion exchange membrane for VRB systems.
Keywords
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
