Active Control of Irreversible Faradic Reactions to Enhance the Performance of Reverse Electrodialysis for Energy Production from Salinity Gradients
Yoontaek Oh (University of Cincinnati)
Ji Hyung Han (Korea Institute of Energy Research, Jeju)
Hanki Kim (Korea Institute of Energy Research, Jeju)
Namjo Jeong (Korea Institute of Energy Research, Jeju)
David A. Vermaas (TU Delft - ChemE/Transport Phenomena)
Jin Soo Park (Sangmyung University, Chungnam)
Soryong Chae (University of Cincinnati)
More Info
expand_more
Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.
Abstract
Irreversible faradic reactions in reverse electrodialysis (RED) are an emerging concern for scale-up, reducing the overall performance of RED and producing environmentally harmful chemical species. Capacitive RED (CRED) has the potential to generate electricity without the necessity of irreversible faradic reactions. However, there is a critical knowledge gap in the fundamental understanding of the effects of operational stack voltages of CRED on irreversible faradic reactions and the performance of CRED. This study aims to develop an active control strategy to avoid irreversible faradic reactions and pH change in CRED, focusing on the effects of a stack voltage (0.9-5.0 V) on irreversible faradic reactions and power generation. Results show that increasing the initial output voltage of CRED by increasing a stack voltage has an insignificant impact on irreversible faradic reactions, regardless of the stack voltage applied, but a cutoff output voltage of CRED is mainly responsible for controlling irreversible faradic reactions. The CRED system with eliminating irreversible faradic reactions achieved a maximum power density (1.6 W m-2) from synthetic seawater (0.513 M NaCl) and freshwater (0.004 M NaCl). This work suggests that the control of irreversible faradic reactions in CRED can provide stable power generation using salinity gradients in large-scale operations.