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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(16): 18261-18274, 2022 Apr 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35435656

ABSTRACT

Among existing water electrolysis (WE) technologies, anion-exchange-membrane water electrolyzers (AEMWEs) show promise for low-cost operation enabled by the basic solid-polymer electrolyte used to conduct hydroxide ions. The basic environment within the electrolyzer, in principle, allows the use of non-platinum-group metal catalysts and less-expensive cell components compared to acidic-membrane systems. Nevertheless, AEMWEs are still underdeveloped, and the degradation and failure modes are not well understood. To improve performance and durability, supporting electrolytes such as KOH and K2CO3 are often added to the water feed. The effect of the anion interactions with the ionomer membrane (particularly other than OH-), however, remains poorly understood. We studied three commercial anion-exchange ionomers (Aemion, Sustainion, and PiperION) during oxygen evolution (OER) at oxidizing potentials in several supporting electrolytes and characterized their chemical stability with surface-sensitive techniques. We analyzed factors including the ionomer conductivity, redox potential, and pH tolerance to determine what governs ionomer stability during OER. Specifically, we discovered that the oxidation of Aemion at the electrode surface is favored in the presence of CO32-/HCO3- anions perhaps due to the poor conductivity of that ionomer in the carbonate/bicarbonate form. Sustainion tends to lose its charge-carrying groups as a result of electrochemical degradation favored in basic electrolytes. PiperION seems to be similarly negatively affected by a pH drop and low carbonate/bicarbonate conductivity under the applied oxidizing potential. The insight into the interactions of the supporting electrolyte anions with the ionomer/membrane helps shed light on some of the degradation pathways possible inside of the AEMWE and enables the informed design of materials for water electrolysis.

2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(44): 51917-51924, 2021 Nov 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34374278

ABSTRACT

Water electrolysis powered by renewable electricity produces green hydrogen and oxygen gas, which can be used for energy, fertilizer, and industrial applications and thus displace fossil fuels. Pure-water anion-exchange-membrane (AEM) electrolyzers in principle offer the advantages of commercialized proton-exchange-membrane systems (high current density, low cross over, output gas compression, etc.) while enabling the use of less-expensive steel components and nonprecious metal catalysts. AEM electrolyzer research and development, however, has been limited by the lack of broadly accessible materials that provide consistent cell performance, making it difficult to compare results across studies. Further, even when the same materials are used, different pretreatments and electrochemical analysis techniques can produce different results. Here, we report an AEM electrolyzer comprising commercially available catalysts, membrane, ionomer, and gas-diffusion layers operating near 1.9 V at 1 A cm-2 in pure water. After the initial break in, the performance degraded by 0.67 mV h-1 at 0.5 A cm-2 at 55 °C. We detail the key preparation, assembly, and operation techniques employed and show further performance improvements using advanced materials as a proof-of-concept for future AEM-electrolyzer development. The data thus provide an easily reproducible and comparatively high-performance baseline that can be used by other laboratories to calibrate the performance of improved cell components, nonprecious metal oxygen evolution, and hydrogen evolution catalysts and learn how to mitigate degradation pathways.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(4): 1372-1384, 2018 01 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29314839

ABSTRACT

Anion-exchange membranes (AEMs) consisting of poly(vinyl benzyl trimethylammonium)-b-poly(methylbutylene) of three different ion exchange capacities (IECs), 1.14, 1.64, and 2.03 mequiv g-1, are studied by High-Resolution Thermogravimetry, Modulated Differential Scanning Calorimetry, Dynamic Mechanical Analysis, and Broadband Electrical Spectroscopy in their OH- form. The thermal stability and transitions are elucidated, showing a low temperature Tg and a higher temperature transition assigned to a disorder-order transition, Tδ, which depends on the IEC of the material. The electric response is analyzed in detail, allowing the identification of three polarizations (only two of which contribute significantly to the overall conductivity, σEP and σIP,1) and two dielectric relaxation events (ß1 and ß2), one associated with the tolyl side groups (ß1) and one with the cationic side chains (ß2). The obtained results are integrated in a coherent picture and a conductivity mechanism is proposed, involving two distinct conduction pathways, σEP and σIP,1. Importantly, we observed a reordering of the ion pair dipoles which is responsible for the Tδ at temperatures higher than 20 °C, which results in a dramatic decrease of the ionic conductivity. Clustering is highly implicated in the higher IEC membrane in the hydroxyl form, which reduces the efficiency of the anionic transport.

4.
J Org Chem ; 82(13): 6578-6585, 2017 07 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28548848

ABSTRACT

Perfluorocyclobutyl polymers are thermally and chemically stable, may be produced without a catalyst via thermal 2π-2π cycloaddition, and can form block structures, making them suitable for commercialization of specialty polymers. Thermal 2π-2π cycloaddition is a rare reaction that begins in the singlet state and proceeds through a triplet intermediate to form an energetically stable four-membered ring in the singlet state. This reaction involves two changes in spin state and, thus, two spin-crossover transitions. Presented here are density functional theory calculations that evaluate the energetics and reaction mechanisms for the dimerizations of two different polyfluorinated precursors, 1,1,2-trifluoro-2-(trifluoromethoxy)ethane and hexafluoropropylene. The spin-crossover transition states are thoroughly investigated, revealing important kinetics steps and an activation energy for the gas-phase cycloaddition of two hexafluoropropene molecules of 36.9 kcal/mol, which is in good agreement with the experimentally determined value of 34.3 kcal/mol. It is found that the first carbon-carbon bond formation is the rate-limiting step, followed by a rotation about the newly formed bond in the triplet state that results in the formation of the second carbon-carbon bond. Targeting the rotation of the C-C bond, a set of parameters were obtained that best produce high molecular weight polymers using this chemistry.

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