Sulfonated poly(ether-ether-ketone) membranes with intrinsic microporosity enable efficient redox flow batteries for energy storage

by Toby Wong, Yijie Yang, Rui Tan, Anqi Wang, Zhizhang Yuan, Jiaxi Li, Dezhi Liu, Alberto Alvarez Fernandez, Chunchun Ye, Mark Sankey, David Ainsworth, Stefan Guldin, Fabrizia Foglia, Neil B. McKeown, Kim E. Jelfs, Xianfeng Li, Qilei Song
Year: 2025 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joule.2024.11.012

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Published in Joule

Abstract

Redox flow batteries (RFBs) are promising for long-duration grid-scale sustainable energy storage. The ion-exchange membrane is a key component that determines energy efficiency and cycling stability. However, it remains challenging to develop membranes with high ionic conductivity and high selectivity toward redox-active electrolytes. We report the development of ion-conductive polymer membranes with record-breaking energy efficiency. By incorporating triptycene into poly(ether-ether-ketone) and controlled sulfonation, the resulting intrinsically microporous polymer membranes form highly interconnected water channels that facilitate transport of charge-balancing ions, particularly hydroxide anions. These microporous membranes showed high ionic conductivity without compromising the selectivity toward redox-active species. The membranes enabled excellent performance in alkaline aqueous organic and zinc-iron flow batteries, demonstrating long-term stability, high power density, and an operational current density up to 700 mA cm−2. The membranes also improved performance in neutral pH aqueous RFBs with high capacity utilization and retention, enhanced energy efficiency, and boosted power density.