Details

Project TitleRechargeable Desalination Battery
Track CodeP170083US01
Websitehttp://www.warf.org/technologies/summary/P170083US01.cmsx
Short DescriptionAccess to fresh water is a pressing geopolitical issue and technological challenge. Desalination is a potentially viable solution considering the abundance of seawater on Earth. While reverse osmosis is an advanced science, the process requires significant electrical input. A promising alternative is capacitive deionization (CDI), which removes salt ions by capturing them in a double layer of high surface area electrodes.

CDI cells have been limited primarily to brackish water and are less effective at removing salt from concentrated sources like ocean water. To increase capacity, researchers know that salt ions can be stored in the bulk of the electrode through the formation of chemical bonds. Moreover, if the cell can store and release salt ions through the charging/discharging cycle and recover some of the energy in the process, it could be considered a rechargeable ‘desalination battery’ with the potential to slash overall energy input.

To date, attempts to engineer such a cell have relied on costly silver as the chloride-storage electrode. The commercial viability of the technology depends on the development of more efficient, stable and practical electrode material.\r\n\r\nUW–Madison researchers have designed a rechargeable desalination cell that can operate on seawater and is capable of performing a desalination/salination cycle with a net potential input as low as 0.2 volts. The cell comprises a sodium-storage electrode coupled to a chloride-storage electrode made of nanocrystalline bismuth foam.

The bismuth-based electrodes are able to store chloride ions in their bulk by oxidizing Bi to BiOCl in the presence of an oxygen source, such as water. Advantageously, BiOCl is insoluble in water over a wide pH range and inert against water oxidation. It also is stable over a wide range of anodic potentials. As a result, the new electrodes can be used for chloride removal in a variety of aqueous sources.

The BiOCl electrode can be converted back to a bismuth electrode by a reduction reaction, where the chloride ions are released into the electrolyte. This reverse reaction allows for the repeated use of the electrode for chloride storage/release via multiple chlorination/dechlorination cycles.
AbstractThe Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) is seeking commercial partners interested in developing the first practical, high capacity desalination cell using bismuth-based chloride-storage electrodes.
 
Tagsenvironmental, desalination, battery
 
Posted DateAug 8, 2017 1:22 AM

Advantages

  • Based on the use of inexpensive Bi electrodes
  • Offers a desalination mechanism completely different from reverse osmosis and CDI
  • Dramatically reduced requirement for electrical power
  • Dramatically lower operating cost
  • Commercially viable

Potential Applications

  • Efficient and practical desalination of seawater/brackish water, or other chloride removal processes
  • Could be strategically integrated with various electrochemical processes to maximize useful outcome (e.g., fresh water, energy input, H2 and Cl2) while minimizing energy overhead

Additional Information

See WARF reference number P140325US01 for information about the researcher’s high performance BiVO4 water-splitting cells.

http://www.warf.org/technologies/summary/P140325US01.cmsx



Nam D.-H. and Choi K.-S. 2017. Bismuth as a New Chloride-Storage Electrode Enabling the Construction of a Practical High Capacity Desalination Battery. J. Am. Chem. Soc. Epub 8.4.17. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b01119

Nam D.-H. and Choi K.-S. 2017. Bismuth as a New Chloride-Storage Electrode Enabling the Construction of a Practical High Capacity Desalination Battery. J. Am. Chem. Soc. Epub 8.4.17. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b01119

Contact Information

TTO Home Page: http://www.warf.org



Name : Jennifer Gottwald

Title : Director of Licensing

Department : Licensing

Email : jennifer@warf.org

Phone : 608-960-9854

Address : 614 Walnut Street, 13th floor, Madison, WI 53726

Principal Investigator

Name : Dohwan Nam

Department : Chemistry



Name : Kyoung-Shin Choi

Department : Chemistry

Intellectual Property

Patent Number : 10,414,674

Patent Title : BISMUTH-BASED CHLORIDE-STORAGE ELECTRODES

Patent Application Date : Jan 18, 2017

Patent Publication Date : Jul 19, 2018

Patent Issue Date : Sep 17, 2019

Patent Link : http://www.warf.org/documents/ipstatus/P170083US01.PDF