Carbon monoliths with hierarchical porous structure for all‐vanadium redox flow batteries

10Citations
Citations of this article
17Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Carbon monoliths were tested as electrodes for vanadium redox batteries. The materials were synthesised by a hard‐templating route, employing sucrose as carbon precursor and sodium chloride crystals as the hard template. For the preparation process, both sucrose and sodium chloride were ball‐milled together and molten into a paste which was hot‐pressed to achieve polycon-densation of sucrose into a hard monolith. The resultant material was pyrolysed in nitrogen at 750 °C, and then washed to remove the salt by dissolving it in water. Once the porosity was opened, a second pyrolysis step at 900 °C was performed for the complete conversion of the materials into carbon. The products were next characterised in terms of textural properties and composition. Changes in porosity, obtained by varying the proportions of sucrose to sodium chloride in the initial mixture, were correlated with the electrochemical performances of the samples, and a good agree-ment between capacitive response and microporosity was indeed observed highlighted by an in-crease in the cyclic voltammetry curve area when the SBET increased. In contrast, the reversibility of vanadium redox reactions measured as a function of the difference between reduction and oxida-tion potentials was correlated with the accessibility of the active vanadium species to the carbon surface, i.e., was correlated with the macroporosity. The latter was a critical parameter for under-standing the differences of energy and voltage efficiencies among the materials, those with larger macropore volumes having the higher efficiencies.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Vivo‐vilches, J. F., Karakashov, B., Celzard, A., Fierro, V., El Hage, R., Brosse, N., … Etienne, M. (2021). Carbon monoliths with hierarchical porous structure for all‐vanadium redox flow batteries. Batteries, 7(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/batteries7030055

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free