Bioadhesive-Inspired Ionomer for Membrane Electrode Assembly Interface Reinforcement in Fuel Cells

Anion exchange membrane fuel cells promise a sustainable and ecofriendly energy conversion pathway yet suffer from insufficient performance and durability. Drawing inspiration from mussel foot adhesion proteins for the first time, we herein demonstrate catechol-modified ionomers that synergistically...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2024-08, Vol.146 (32), p.22590-22599
Hauptverfasser: Yu, Weisheng, Xu, Yan, Liu, Zhiru, Luo, Fen, Sun, Xu, Li, Xiaojiang, Duan, Fanglin, Liang, Xian, Wu, Liang, Xu, Tongwen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Anion exchange membrane fuel cells promise a sustainable and ecofriendly energy conversion pathway yet suffer from insufficient performance and durability. Drawing inspiration from mussel foot adhesion proteins for the first time, we herein demonstrate catechol-modified ionomers that synergistically reinforce the membrane electrode assembly interface and triple-phase boundary inside catalyst layers. The resulting ionomers present exceptional alkaline stability with only slight ionic conductivity declines after treatment in 2 M NaOH aqueous solution at 80 °C for 2500 h. Adopting catechol-modified ionomer as both anion exchange membrane and binder achieves a single-cell performance increase of 34%, and more importantly, endows fuel cell operation at a current density of 0.4 A cm–2 for over 300 h with negligible performance degradation (with a cell voltage decay rate of 0.03 mV h–1). Combining theoretical and experimental investigations, we reveal the molecular adhesion mechanism between the catechol-modified ionomer and Pt catalyst and illuminate the effect on the catalyst layer microstructure. Of fundamental interest, this bioadhesive-inspired strategy is critical to enabling knowledge-driven ionomer design and is promising for diverse membrane electrode assembly configurational applications.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.4c06961