Capturing Hydrated Vanadium Ion Dynamics in Ionomer Nanocomposites Used for Redox Flow Batteries

Herein, we employed high-flux backscattering spectroscopy to capture for the first time the motions of hydrated vanadyl ions in ionomer nanocomposites prepared by both solution-cast and in situ sol–gel condensation methods. Both local and jump diffusion coefficients of the hydrated vanadyl (VO2+) io...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of physical chemistry. B 2024-06, Vol.128 (23), p.5766-5780
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Xueting, Balwani, Apoorv, Tyagi, Madhusudan, Davis, Eric M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Herein, we employed high-flux backscattering spectroscopy to capture for the first time the motions of hydrated vanadyl ions in ionomer nanocomposites prepared by both solution-cast and in situ sol–gel condensation methods. Both local and jump diffusion coefficients of the hydrated vanadyl (VO2+) ions as well as the dynamic length scales of ion motions and the fraction of immobile hydrogen atoms were extracted from the scattering spectra. Notably, for solution-cast membranes, the jump and local diffusion coefficients of hydrated VO2+ ions were seen to decrease by over 10- and 4-fold, respectively, with the introduction of 10 mass % silica nanoparticles (SiNPs) compared to their neat counterparts. Further, the VO2+ diffusion coefficients were observed to decrease with thermal annealing, though the impact of annealing was less significant than that seen with the introduction of SiNPs. Finally, in general, thermal annealing and the introduction of SiNPs had no measurable impact on the fraction of immobile hydrogen atoms in both solution-cast and sol-gel ionomer nanocomposites. The data observed in this work, in conjunction with previous structural and chain dynamics studies on hydrated Nafion-SiNP nanocomposites, suggest that a combination of stiffening of the segmental dynamics as well as a decrease in available sulfonic acid groups facilitating transport leads to an overall decrease in mobility of vanadium ions in these ionomer nanocomposites.
ISSN:1520-6106
1520-5207
1520-5207
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.4c01203