RESUMO
A great deal of research has been dedicated to improving the performance of vanadium redox flow battery (VRFB). In this work, we propose the design of a cell for testing membrane electrode assembly of VRFB, which enables the optimization of the flow field, conditions of charge-discharge tests, and the nature of components (electrodes, membrane) with minimal time and material expenses. The essence of the proposed cell is that the system of channels distributing the electrolyte is made by cutting shaped holes in the sheets of graphite foil (GF). This manner allows easy modification of the flow field configurations. Polarization curves for serpentine, interdigitated, and flow-through systems were measured according to procedures used in such studies. Cell with GF plates being tested with vanadium-sulfuric acid electrolyte, outperforms the cell with conventional graphite plates with the same parameters of the flow field. It demonstrates 734â mW cm-2 of peak power density at SOC 50 and 84.3 % of energy efficiency at 84.5 % of electrolyte utilization under galvanostatic charge/discharge cycling with 75â mA cm-2 .
RESUMO
This paper contains a vanadium redox flow battery stack with an electrode surface area 40 cm2 test data. The aim of the study was to characterize the performance of the stack of the original design. The dataset include three series of galvanostatic charge-discharge cycling in the potential region 8-16â¯V with current densities 75, 150 and 200â¯mA/cm2 for 100 cycles. Coulomb, voltaic, energy efficiencies and capacity utilization coefficient are also provided for all three series.