Revealing the limits of energy recovery in forward-bias bipolar membranes

17 June 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The ability for bipolar membranes (BPMs) to interconvert voltage and pH makes them attractive materials for use in energy conversion and storage. Reverse-biased BPMs, which use electrical voltage to dissociate water into acid and base, have become increasingly well-studied. However, forward-biased BPMs (FB-BPMs), in which voltage is extracted from pH gradients through recombination, are poorly understood. In this work, physics-based modeling elucidates how complex coupling of transport and kinetics dictates the performance of FB-BPMs in electrochemical devices. Simulations reveal that the open-circuit potential (OCP) of FB-BPMs is dictated by the balance of ion recombination and crossover, where recombination of buffering counter-ions attenuates OCP. Uptake of ionic impurities and fixed-charge neutralization limit achievable current densities by reducing the fraction of fixed-charge sites that mediate recombination. The model highlights the importance and nuances of selective ion management in mitigating energy losses and provides insight into the engineering of FB-BPMs for energy applications.

Keywords

Bipolar Membrane
Forward Bias
Continuum Modeling
Electrochemistry
Ion-conducting Polymers

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