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Main Authors: Lee, KangJin, Wainright, Jesse S., Wirth, Christopher L.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.14618
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author Lee, KangJin
Wainright, Jesse S.
Wirth, Christopher L.
author_facet Lee, KangJin
Wainright, Jesse S.
Wirth, Christopher L.
contents Carbon black slurries are a key component in redox flow batteries as the large surface area provided by the particles allows an increase in the battery capacity without facing limitations posed by many solid-state batteries such as safety hazard or cost. However, these conductive slurries often have complex mechanical and electrical responses because of the heterogeneous nature of the suspensions. Utilization of these slurries in a redox flow battery requires understanding of how additives impact the material responses and associated battery performance. This work focuses on the electrochemical performance of the slurry at flow rate conditions matching those of battery operation. In addition, the impact of a nonionic surfactant (Triton X-100) on the conductivity and capacitance of the slurry was measured. Experimental results show that the full capacitive contribution of the carbon black particles can only be measured at low flow rates and low scan rates, while the conductive contribution can be measured at all scan rates in flowing conditions. Upon the addition of surfactants, there is a gradual decrease in the electrochemical performance with increasing surfactant concentration until the surface of the carbon black particle is saturated. Once saturated, the conductive carbon particles no longer contribute to the electronic conductivity of the slurry. Results presented herein on the electrochemical response of the slurry to the addition of surfactant are in stark contrast to the mechanical response. While previous work has shown a smaller change in the response, followed by a step-change at a critical surfactant concentration, electrochemical data shows a gradual transition. Comparison of these behaviors suggests a difference in the mechanisms for how mechanical networks form in comparison to charge transfer networks for this particular slurry chemistry.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2505_14618
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Impact of Surfactant and Flow Rate on the Electrical Properties of Activated Carbon Black Suspensions
Lee, KangJin
Wainright, Jesse S.
Wirth, Christopher L.
Soft Condensed Matter
Carbon black slurries are a key component in redox flow batteries as the large surface area provided by the particles allows an increase in the battery capacity without facing limitations posed by many solid-state batteries such as safety hazard or cost. However, these conductive slurries often have complex mechanical and electrical responses because of the heterogeneous nature of the suspensions. Utilization of these slurries in a redox flow battery requires understanding of how additives impact the material responses and associated battery performance. This work focuses on the electrochemical performance of the slurry at flow rate conditions matching those of battery operation. In addition, the impact of a nonionic surfactant (Triton X-100) on the conductivity and capacitance of the slurry was measured. Experimental results show that the full capacitive contribution of the carbon black particles can only be measured at low flow rates and low scan rates, while the conductive contribution can be measured at all scan rates in flowing conditions. Upon the addition of surfactants, there is a gradual decrease in the electrochemical performance with increasing surfactant concentration until the surface of the carbon black particle is saturated. Once saturated, the conductive carbon particles no longer contribute to the electronic conductivity of the slurry. Results presented herein on the electrochemical response of the slurry to the addition of surfactant are in stark contrast to the mechanical response. While previous work has shown a smaller change in the response, followed by a step-change at a critical surfactant concentration, electrochemical data shows a gradual transition. Comparison of these behaviors suggests a difference in the mechanisms for how mechanical networks form in comparison to charge transfer networks for this particular slurry chemistry.
title Impact of Surfactant and Flow Rate on the Electrical Properties of Activated Carbon Black Suspensions
topic Soft Condensed Matter
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.14618