Print-and-plate architected electrodes for electrochemical transformations under flow

21 October 2024, Version 1

Abstract

Flow cell electrodes are typically composed of porous carbon materials, such as papers, felts, and cloths. However, their random architecture hinders fundamental characterization of electrode structure-performance relationships during in situ operation of porous electrochemical flow systems. Here, we report a “print-and-plate” method that uses high-resolution direct ink writing to produce periodic lattices followed by a two-step metal plating process to convert these lattices into highly conductive (sheet resistance 40 milli-Ohm per square) electrodes. We assessed their in operando performance in an anthraquinone disulfonic acid half-cell using electrochemical fluorescence microscopy, where output current and fluorescence intensity are in excellent agreement. We then compared the pressure drop of three electrode designs simulated with a high-fidelity numerical solution to the governing PDEs. The most efficient design was then fabricated via the print-and-plate method and confocal fluorescence microscopy was used to generate a 3D map of the state of charge (SOC) inside the working electrode. The experimental state of charge map is in good agreement with our simulations. By unlocking programmable architectures, print-and-plate electrodes offer new opportunities for fundamental investigations relating porous electrode microstructure to performance and direct replication of simulated structures.

Keywords

Porous Electrodes
3D-Printing
Flow Battery
Electrochemistry
Direct Ink Writing

Supplementary materials

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Supplementary Movie 1
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A print spanning 700 micron gaps.
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Supplementary Movie 2
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Printing a lattice with 100 micron by 100 micron unit cells.
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Supplementary Movie 3
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4 unit cell x 4 unit cell region of a logpile print-and-plate lattice operating under periodic potentials.
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Supplementary Movie 4
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Low-magnification video of a print-and-plate lattice operating under periodic potentials.
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Supplementary Movie 5
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Printing a stagger-stack lattice.
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Supplementary Movie 6
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Z-stack of OCV-subtracted fluorescence in an operating stagger-stack electrode.
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Supplementary Movie 7
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3D SOC map in a stagger-stack electrode.
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Supplementary Movie 8
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SOC map in a simulated stagger-stack electrode.
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Supplementary weblinks

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