Gas Transport in Proton Exchange Membranes for use in Fuel Cell Applications

The objectives of this research were to study the gas transport properties of proton exchange membranes (PEM), namely disulfonated poly(arylene ether sulfone) (BPSH-35), post sulfonated diels-alder poly(phenylene) (SDAPP), and poly(perfluoro sulfonic acid) (Nafion). The O2 gas permeabilities were f...

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Main Author: James, Charles William Jr.
Other Authors: Chemical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29808
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11302007-165317/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-298082020-09-26T05:31:32Z Gas Transport in Proton Exchange Membranes for use in Fuel Cell Applications James, Charles William Jr. Chemical Engineering Marand, Eva McGrath, James E. Baird, Donald G. Davis, Richey M. Cornelius, Christopher J. Gas Sorption Gas Permeation Relative Humidity Fuel Cells Nafion Diels alder poly(phenylene) Poly(arylene ether sulfone) The objectives of this research were to study the gas transport properties of proton exchange membranes (PEM), namely disulfonated poly(arylene ether sulfone) (BPSH-35), post sulfonated diels-alder poly(phenylene) (SDAPP), and poly(perfluoro sulfonic acid) (Nafion). The O2 gas permeabilities were found to be lower in BPSH and SDAPP as compared to poly(perfluoro sulfonic acid) because of difference in Tg (TgBSPH= 250 oC, TgSDAPP= 330 oC versus TgNafion=150 oC). Higher Tg polymers have a more rigid, inflexible polymer segments causing a reduction in gas permeability. In comparison to SDAPP, BPSH has a lower O2 gas permeability because of the bulky side groups in the SDAPP backbone. O2 sorption measurements were carried out both under non-humidified and humidified conditions as a function of relative humidity and temperature at a normal PEM operating pressure of 1 atm. Under non-humidified conditions, BPSH, SDAPP, and Nafion 112 exhibited Henryâ s Law sorption, consistent with dilute dissolution of O2 into the polymer matrix. The enthalpies of sorption were calculated to determine the interaction of O2 with each membrane. The sorption enthalpies in BPSH and SDAPP increased with increasing pressure indicating the formation of more O2-O2 interactions. The enthalpies in Nafion 112 were relatively constant with increasing pressure. In the presence of moisture, the sorption behavior changed from Henryâ s Law to Type IV sorption behavior, which is common in hydrophilic polymers. The SDAPP membrane was found to have the highest percent wet O2 mass uptake because of a higher number of sulfonic acid groups interacting with the water/O2 system. Finally the O2 sorption for various porous catalyst powders, consisting of platinum supported on carbon was measured in the non-humidified and humidified state. The catalysts were found to have Knudsen diffusion in the non-humidified state with 20 wt% Pt-C having the largest O2 sorption. In the humidified state, the highest O2 mass uptake was achieved with 40 wt% Pt-C. These results are explained in terms of the trade-off between catalyst dispersion and catalyst size. Furthermore, O2 sorption measurements were utilized for membrane electrode assemblies containing 40 wt% Pt-C and hot pressed at 210 oC for BPSH-35 (25 and 80K) and Nafion 112 membranes. The same sorption behavior occurred in the MEAs as in the neat membrane, but at a lower capacity. This is because the electrode introduces a more tortuous path to the gas molecules permeating across the membrane. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:19:24Z 2014-03-14T20:19:24Z 2007-11-19 2007-11-30 2007-12-05 2007-12-05 Dissertation etd-11302007-165317 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29808 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11302007-165317/ CharlesWJamesJrDissertation1.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Gas Sorption
Gas Permeation
Relative Humidity
Fuel Cells
Nafion
Diels alder poly(phenylene)
Poly(arylene ether sulfone)
spellingShingle Gas Sorption
Gas Permeation
Relative Humidity
Fuel Cells
Nafion
Diels alder poly(phenylene)
Poly(arylene ether sulfone)
James, Charles William Jr.
Gas Transport in Proton Exchange Membranes for use in Fuel Cell Applications
description The objectives of this research were to study the gas transport properties of proton exchange membranes (PEM), namely disulfonated poly(arylene ether sulfone) (BPSH-35), post sulfonated diels-alder poly(phenylene) (SDAPP), and poly(perfluoro sulfonic acid) (Nafion). The O2 gas permeabilities were found to be lower in BPSH and SDAPP as compared to poly(perfluoro sulfonic acid) because of difference in Tg (TgBSPH= 250 oC, TgSDAPP= 330 oC versus TgNafion=150 oC). Higher Tg polymers have a more rigid, inflexible polymer segments causing a reduction in gas permeability. In comparison to SDAPP, BPSH has a lower O2 gas permeability because of the bulky side groups in the SDAPP backbone. O2 sorption measurements were carried out both under non-humidified and humidified conditions as a function of relative humidity and temperature at a normal PEM operating pressure of 1 atm. Under non-humidified conditions, BPSH, SDAPP, and Nafion 112 exhibited Henryâ s Law sorption, consistent with dilute dissolution of O2 into the polymer matrix. The enthalpies of sorption were calculated to determine the interaction of O2 with each membrane. The sorption enthalpies in BPSH and SDAPP increased with increasing pressure indicating the formation of more O2-O2 interactions. The enthalpies in Nafion 112 were relatively constant with increasing pressure. In the presence of moisture, the sorption behavior changed from Henryâ s Law to Type IV sorption behavior, which is common in hydrophilic polymers. The SDAPP membrane was found to have the highest percent wet O2 mass uptake because of a higher number of sulfonic acid groups interacting with the water/O2 system. Finally the O2 sorption for various porous catalyst powders, consisting of platinum supported on carbon was measured in the non-humidified and humidified state. The catalysts were found to have Knudsen diffusion in the non-humidified state with 20 wt% Pt-C having the largest O2 sorption. In the humidified state, the highest O2 mass uptake was achieved with 40 wt% Pt-C. These results are explained in terms of the trade-off between catalyst dispersion and catalyst size. Furthermore, O2 sorption measurements were utilized for membrane electrode assemblies containing 40 wt% Pt-C and hot pressed at 210 oC for BPSH-35 (25 and 80K) and Nafion 112 membranes. The same sorption behavior occurred in the MEAs as in the neat membrane, but at a lower capacity. This is because the electrode introduces a more tortuous path to the gas molecules permeating across the membrane. === Ph. D.
author2 Chemical Engineering
author_facet Chemical Engineering
James, Charles William Jr.
author James, Charles William Jr.
author_sort James, Charles William Jr.
title Gas Transport in Proton Exchange Membranes for use in Fuel Cell Applications
title_short Gas Transport in Proton Exchange Membranes for use in Fuel Cell Applications
title_full Gas Transport in Proton Exchange Membranes for use in Fuel Cell Applications
title_fullStr Gas Transport in Proton Exchange Membranes for use in Fuel Cell Applications
title_full_unstemmed Gas Transport in Proton Exchange Membranes for use in Fuel Cell Applications
title_sort gas transport in proton exchange membranes for use in fuel cell applications
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29808
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11302007-165317/
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