Self-Assembly and Transport Limitations in Confined Nafion Films

Ion-conducting polymers are important materials for a variety of electrochemical applications. Perfluorinated ionomers, such as Nafion, are the benchmark materials for proton conduction and are widely used in fuel cells and other electrochemical devices including solar-fuel generators, chlor-alkali...

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Veröffentlicht in:Macromolecules 2013-02, Vol.46 (3), p.867-873
Hauptverfasser: Modestino, Miguel A, Paul, Devproshad K, Dishari, Shudipto, Petrina, Stephanie A, Allen, Frances I, Hickner, Michael A, Karan, Kunal, Segalman, Rachel A, Weber, Adam Z
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ion-conducting polymers are important materials for a variety of electrochemical applications. Perfluorinated ionomers, such as Nafion, are the benchmark materials for proton conduction and are widely used in fuel cells and other electrochemical devices including solar-fuel generators, chlor-alkali cells, and redox flow batteries. While the behavior of Nafion in bulk membranes (10 to 100s μm thick) has been studied extensively, understanding its properties under thin-film confinement is limited. Elucidating the behavior of thin Nafion films is particularly important for the optimization of fuel-cell catalyst layers or vapor-operated solar-fuel generators, where a thin film of ionomer is responsible for the transport of ions to and from the active electrocatalytic centers. Using a combination of transport-property measurements and structural characterization, this work demonstrates that confinement of Nafion in thin films induced thickness-dependent proton conductivity and ionic-domain structure. Confining Nafion films to thicknesses below 50 nm on a silicon substrate results in a loss of microphase separation of the hydrophilic and hydrophobic domains, which drastically increases the material’s water uptake while in turn decreasing its ionic conductivity.
ISSN:0024-9297
1520-5835
DOI:10.1021/ma301999a