Abstract
Membrane capacitive deionization (MCDI) is an emerging water desalination platform that is compact, electrified, and does not require high‐pressure piping. Herein, highly conductive poly(phenylene alkylene) ion‐exchange membranes (IEMs) are micropatterned with different surface geometries for MCDI. The micropatterned membranes increase the interfacial area with the liquid stream leading to a 700 mV reduction in cell voltage when operating at constant current (2 mA cm−2; 2000 ppm NaCl feed) while improving the energy normalized adsorbed salt (ENAS) value by 1.4 times. Combining the micropatterned poly(phenylene alkylene) IEMs with poly(phenylene alkylene) ionomer‐filled electrodes reduces the cell voltage by 1000 mV and improves the ENAS values by 2.3 times relative to the base case. This reduction in cell voltage allows for higher current density operation (i.e., 3–4 mA cm−2) . The reduction in cell voltage is ascribed to the ameliorating ohmic resistances related to ion transport at the membrane‐process stream interface and in the carbon cloth electrode. Finally, porous ionic conductors are implemented into the spacer channel with flat and micropatterned IEM configurations and ionomer infiltrated electrodes. For the configuration with flat IEMs, the porous ionic conductor improves ENAS values across the current density regime (2–4 mA cm−2), while for micropatterned IEMs it gets improved only at 4 mA cm−2.
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