Multiscale Tortuous Diffusion in Anion- and Cation-Exchange Membranes: Exploration of Counterions, Water Content, and Polymer Functionality
Fundamental understanding of water transport and morphology is critical for improving ion conductivity in polymer electrolyte membranes (PEMs). Herein, we present comprehensive water transport measurements comparing anion-exchange membranes (AEMs) based on ammonium-functionalized poly(phenylene oxid...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-888492020-09-29T05:45:07Z Multiscale Tortuous Diffusion in Anion- and Cation-Exchange Membranes: Exploration of Counterions, Water Content, and Polymer Functionality Thieu, Lam Mai Chemistry Madsen, Louis A. Deck, Paul A. Dorn, Harry C. fuel cell ion-exchange membranes AEMs PFG-NMR self-diffusion restricted diffusion Fundamental understanding of water transport and morphology is critical for improving ion conductivity in polymer electrolyte membranes (PEMs). Herein, we present comprehensive water transport measurements comparing anion-exchange membranes (AEMs) based on ammonium-functionalized poly(phenylene oxide) and cation-exchange membranes (CEMs) based on sulfonated poly(ether sulfone). We investigate the influence of counter ions, alkyl side chain, and degree of functionalization on water transport in AEMs and CEMs using pulsed-field-gradient (PFG) NMR diffusometry. Water diffusion in both AEMs and CEMs exhibit specific trends as a function of water uptake (wt%), indicating morphological similarities across common chemical structures. Furthermore, restricted diffusion reveals micron-scale heterogeneity of the hydrophilic network in both CEMs and AEMs. We propose a model wherein the hydrophilic network in these membranes has micron-scale distributions of local nm-scale dead ends, leading to changes in tortuosity as a function of water content, counterion type, and polymer structure. We furthermore parse tortuosity into two regimes, corresponding to nm-to-bulk and µm-to-bulk ranges, which reveal the importance of multi-scale morphological structures that influence bulk transport. This study provides new insights into polymer membrane morphology from nm to µm scales with the ultimate goal of controlling polymeric materials for enhanced fuel cells and other separations applications MS 2019-04-06T06:00:44Z 2019-04-06T06:00:44Z 2017-10-12 Thesis vt_gsexam:13066 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/88849 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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fuel cell ion-exchange membranes AEMs PFG-NMR self-diffusion restricted diffusion |
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fuel cell ion-exchange membranes AEMs PFG-NMR self-diffusion restricted diffusion Thieu, Lam Mai Multiscale Tortuous Diffusion in Anion- and Cation-Exchange Membranes: Exploration of Counterions, Water Content, and Polymer Functionality |
description |
Fundamental understanding of water transport and morphology is critical for improving ion conductivity in polymer electrolyte membranes (PEMs). Herein, we present comprehensive water transport measurements comparing anion-exchange membranes (AEMs) based on ammonium-functionalized poly(phenylene oxide) and cation-exchange membranes (CEMs) based on sulfonated poly(ether sulfone). We investigate the influence of counter ions, alkyl side chain, and degree of functionalization on water transport in AEMs and CEMs using pulsed-field-gradient (PFG) NMR diffusometry. Water diffusion in both AEMs and CEMs exhibit specific trends as a function of water uptake (wt%), indicating morphological similarities across common chemical structures. Furthermore, restricted diffusion reveals micron-scale heterogeneity of the hydrophilic network in both CEMs and AEMs. We propose a model wherein the hydrophilic network in these membranes has micron-scale distributions of local nm-scale dead ends, leading to changes in tortuosity as a function of water content, counterion type, and polymer structure. We furthermore parse tortuosity into two regimes, corresponding to nm-to-bulk and µm-to-bulk ranges, which reveal the importance of multi-scale morphological structures that influence bulk transport. This study provides new insights into polymer membrane morphology from nm to µm scales with the ultimate goal of controlling polymeric materials for enhanced fuel cells and other separations applications === MS |
author2 |
Chemistry |
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Chemistry Thieu, Lam Mai |
author |
Thieu, Lam Mai |
author_sort |
Thieu, Lam Mai |
title |
Multiscale Tortuous Diffusion in Anion- and Cation-Exchange Membranes: Exploration of Counterions, Water Content, and Polymer Functionality |
title_short |
Multiscale Tortuous Diffusion in Anion- and Cation-Exchange Membranes: Exploration of Counterions, Water Content, and Polymer Functionality |
title_full |
Multiscale Tortuous Diffusion in Anion- and Cation-Exchange Membranes: Exploration of Counterions, Water Content, and Polymer Functionality |
title_fullStr |
Multiscale Tortuous Diffusion in Anion- and Cation-Exchange Membranes: Exploration of Counterions, Water Content, and Polymer Functionality |
title_full_unstemmed |
Multiscale Tortuous Diffusion in Anion- and Cation-Exchange Membranes: Exploration of Counterions, Water Content, and Polymer Functionality |
title_sort |
multiscale tortuous diffusion in anion- and cation-exchange membranes: exploration of counterions, water content, and polymer functionality |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/88849 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT thieulammai multiscaletortuousdiffusioninanionandcationexchangemembranesexplorationofcounterionswatercontentandpolymerfunctionality |
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1719346357520564224 |