Low Temperature Molten Sodium Batteries
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Large-scale integration of energy storage on the electric grid will be essential to enabling greater penetration of intermittent renewable energy sources, modernizing the grid for increased flexibility security, reliability, and resilience, and enabling cleaner forms of transportation. The purpose of this report is to summarize Sandia's research and capabilities in energy storage and to provide a preliminary roadmap for future efforts in this area that can address the ongoing program needs of DOE and the nation. Mission and vision statements are first presented followed by an overview of the organizational structure at Sandia that provides support and activities in energy storage. Then, a summary of Sandia's energy storage capabilities is presented by technology, including battery storage and materials, power conversion and electronics, subsurface-based energy storage, thermal/thermochemical energy storage, hydrogen storage, data analytics/systems optimization/controls, safety of energy storage systems, and testing/demonstrations/model validation. A summary of identified gaps and needs is also presented for each technology and capability.
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Surface and Coatings Technology
We describe here the immersion corrosion resistance of multilayer polymer-clay nanocomposite (PCN) barrier thin films coated on low carbon steel. Deposited using a Layer-by-Layer (LbL) self-assembly process and only a few hundred nanometers thick, the thin film polymer clay nanocomposites (PCN) exhibited excellent corrosion barrier properties, comparable to coatings that are orders of magnitude thicker. PCN barrier thin films comprising up to 60 “bilayers” of polyethyleneimine and exfoliated montmorillonite were coated onto steel coupons and immersed in high salinity water for up to 7 days to evaluate barrier film corrosion resistance. PCN film performance is shown to be influenced by the number of coated bilayers and, critically, a post-coating crosslinking treatment. Covalently crosslinking the polyethyleneimine components of the films resulted in a significant improvement in corrosion resistance. PCN films that were not crosslinked showed nearly identical electrochemical impedance compared to bare steel, failing rapidly and leading to large areas of visible corrosion. Impedance behavior of the corroding samples was analyzed with a precise model, which allowed the determination of the PCN film properties separate from the substrate and solution. The resistivity through the PCN thin films was very high, even after 7 days of immersion. Though increasing PCN thickness led to increased charge transfer resistance, chemical crosslinking most significantly increased charge transfer resistance by several orders of magnitude. The combined influences of PCN film resistivity and very high charge transfer resistances led to the outstanding corrosion barrier properties. These PCN films show promise toward a new class of low-cost highly applicable anticorrosion coatings.
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