A High Performance All-Polymer Symmetric Faradaic Deionization Cell
Ikusi/ Ireki
Data
2023-02-18Egilea
Fombona-Pascual, Alba
Patil, Nagaraj
García-Quismondo, Enrique
Goujon, Nicolas
Mecerreyes Molero, David
Marcilla, Rebeca
Palma, Jesús
Lado, Julio L.
Chemical Engineering Journal 461 : (2023) // Article ID 142001
Laburpena
Faradaic deionization (FDI) is an emerging and promising electrochemical technology for stable and
efficient water desalination. Battery-type energy storage materials applied in FDI have demonstrated
to achieve higher salt removal capacities than carbon-based conventional capacitive deionization
(CDI) systems. However, most of the reported FDI systems are based on inorganic intercalation
compounds that lack cost, safety and sustainability benefits, thereby curtailing the development of a
feasible FDI cell. In this work, we introduce an all-polymer rocking chair practical FDI cell, with a
symmetric system composed by a redox-active naphthalene-polyimide (named as PNDIE) buckypaper
organic electrodes. First, electrochemical performance of PNDIE in 0.05 M NaCl under open-air
conditions is evaluated in both three-electrode half- and symmetric FDI full-cell using typical lab-scale
electrode dimensions (1.6 mgPNDIE; 0.78 cm2), revealing promising specific capacity (115 mAh g-1)
and excellent cycle stability for full-cell experiments (77 % capacity retention over 1000 cycles). Then,
all-polymer rocking chair FDI flow cell was constructed with practical PNDIE electrodes (92.2
mgPNDIE; 9.6 cm2) that delivered large desalination capacity (155.4 mg g-1 at 0.01 A g-1) and high salt removal rate and productivity (3.42 mg g-1 min-1 at 0.04 A g-1 and 62 L h-1 m-2, respectively). In
addition, long-term stability (23 days) experiments revealed salt adsorption capacity (SAC) retention
values over 95% after 100 cycles. The overall electrochemical and deionization performances of the
reported technology is far superior than the state-of-the-art CDI and FDI techniques, making it a
competitive choice for robust and sustainable “water-energy” electrochemical applications.