Abstract
Aqueous all-iron redox flow batteries are an attractive and economic technology for grid-scale energy storage owing to their use of abundant and environmentally benign iron as redox active material and water as solvent. However, the battery operation is challenged by the plating/stripping reactions of iron and the competing hydrogen evolution reaction at the negative electrode, which hinder performance and durability. Here we tailor the reaction selectivity of the negative electrode by introducing conductive polymer coatings onto porous carbonaceous electrodes. We conformally coated two conductive polymers, poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) and poly(pyrrole) (PPy) with the dopant poly(4-styrenesulfonate) (PSS), and studied the resulting electrochemistry on model electroanalytical platforms and redox flow batteries. Both polymers decrease the hydrogen evolution current on rotating disc electrodes, with PPy/PSS strongly inhibiting the reaction at high overpotentials. In full all-iron redox flow cells, we find that PPy/PSS coating extends cyclability and significantly reduces hydrogen evolution, while PEDOT/PSS coating improves the round-trip efficiency, possibly acting as a redox shuttle for iron stripping reactions. These findings motivate the broader investigation and implementation of conductive polymers to engineer reaction selectivity for flow batteries and other electrochemical technologies.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
Description
Current-voltage profiles for electropolymerization on carbon substrates, iron plating reactions with nucleation analysis on GCEs, photographs of the gas evolution measurement and the cell setups, gas chromatography calibration plot, further plots for hydrogen evolution experiments on PPy/PSS coated GCEs, Fe plating/stripping under optical microscope, hydrogen production rate of the full cells, voltage-time plots of the long-term cycling tests and their averaged efficiencies, and cross-section SEM images of an electrode after cycling
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