2012 AIChE Annual Meeting

(774c) In Situ Investigation of Vanadium Ions Transport in Redox Flow Battery

Authors

Qingtao Luo - Presenter, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Liyu Li, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Zimin Nie, Pacific Northwest National Labratory
Wei Wang, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Xiaoliang Wei, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Feng Chen, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Bin Li, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Guanguang Xia, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Baowei Chen, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Gary Yang, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Sprenkle Vincent, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory


The all-vanadium redox flow battery (VRB) is probably the most promising and extensively researched flow battery system. In order to shed light on the VRB capacity fading mechanism, it is necessary to investigate the transport behaviors of vanadium ions across the membrane. In this work, flow batteries with vanadium and iron redox couples as the electroactive species were employed to investigate the transport behavior of vanadium ions in the presence of an electric field. It was shown that the transport of vanadium ions was affected by a combination of different factors, such as the charge/discharge process, current density, and SOC. The electric field accelerated the positive-to-negative and reduced the negative-to-positive transport of vanadium ions in the charging process and affected the vanadium ion transport in the opposite way during discharge. With the increase of current density, the vanadium ion transport rate increases during the charge process but decreases during discharge. At each given current density, the vanadium ion transport rate, in general, demonstrated a trend of decreasing with the increase of SOC.