Fabrication of high surface area ribbon electrodes for use in redox flow batteries via coaxial electrospinning

•A simple and reliable technique was developed electrospinning fibers with a flat ribbon-like morphology.•A ribbon-based electrode layer shows increased surface to volume ratio.•The ribbon-based electrode showed 2x higher permeability and 40x higher volumetric specific surface higher than commercial...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of energy storage Vol. 33; no. C; p. 102079
Main Authors Yadav, Shashi, Kok, Matt D.R., Forner-Cuenca, Antoni, Tenny, Kevin M., Chiang, Yet-Ming, Brushett, Fikile R., Jervis, Rhodri, Shearing, Paul R., Brett, Dan, Roberts, Edward P.L., Gostick, Jeff T.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier Ltd 01.01.2021
Elsevier
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:•A simple and reliable technique was developed electrospinning fibers with a flat ribbon-like morphology.•A ribbon-based electrode layer shows increased surface to volume ratio.•The ribbon-based electrode showed 2x higher permeability and 40x higher volumetric specific surface higher than commercial electrodes.•The proposed materials were validated in an operating cell and shown to outperform commercial materials at low to moderate current density. A method for the preparation of electrospun with fibers possessing a ribbon-like cross-sectional shape was developed. These materials could prove beneficial as flow-through electrodes, since ribbons provide a higher surface-to-volume ratio compared to fibers, thereby providing higher reactive surface area at a given porosity. Fabrication of these materials was accomplished by electrospinning a coaxial fiber with a polystyrene core and polyacrylonitrile shell, followed by leaching of the core material leading to the collapse of the shell into a flat ribbon. The surviving shell was then carbonized to make an electrically conductive and electrochemically reactive fibrous structure. Analysis by x-ray computed tomography showed that ribbons of approximately 400 nm × 800 nm were produced, and experimental characterization revealed that they did indeed offer higher volumetric surface area than previously reported electrospun cylindrical fiber electrodes. The electrodes were characterized for various physical and transport properties and compared to commercial Freudenberg H23 carbon paper in terms of performance in a vanadium redox flow battery. The ribbon-based electrode had better performance and higher power density than commercial Freudenberg H23 electrode in the activation region, though suffered early onset of mass transfer limitations.
Bibliography:USDOE
De-Ac02–06CH11357
ISSN:2352-152X
2352-1538
DOI:10.1016/j.est.2020.102079