March 28, 2025
Journal Article

Reliability Studies of Vanadium Redox Flow Batteries: Upper Limit Voltage Effect

Abstract

All-vanadium redox flow batteries (VRFBs) show promise as a long-duration energy storage (LDES) technology in grid applications. However, the continual performance fading over time poses a significant obstacle for VRFBs. This study systematically investigates the impact of increased upper limit voltage (1.6 V, 1.7 V, and 1.8 V) in the reliability and degradation of a scaled VRFB cell (49 cm²) over long-term testing (500+ cycles). The findings indicate that higher upper voltages significantly decrease capacity and voltage efficiencies. Although electrolyte remixing can restore the majority of the capacity, it only partially recovers voltage efficiency at 1.7 V and 1.8 V, suggesting substantial cell degradation. Analysis reveals that the overpotential increase induced degradation is mainly contributed by the anode during charging and the cathode during discharging. Increased upper voltage amplifies degradation, with the anode being more affected. As confirmed by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) and polarization curves, elevated voltages lead to significant resistance increases, driven by charge transfer resistance. Additionally, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) characterizations show severe surface degradation of the cathode at maximum upper voltage of 1.8 V. This work highlights the importance of optimizing voltage limits to improve the lifetime of VRFBs and offers valuable insights into the development of predictive models through using accelerated stressor lifetime testing (ASLT) protocols for VRFBs.

Published: March 28, 2025

Citation

Patel R.L., Q. Huang, B. Li, A.J. Crawford, B. Modachur Sivakumar, C. Song, and Z. Jiang, et al. 2024. Reliability Studies of Vanadium Redox Flow Batteries: Upper Limit Voltage Effect. RSC Advances 14, no. 46:34381 - 34389. PNNL-SA-200211. doi:10.1039/d4ra04713c

Research topics