Proton transport through acid aggregates in a hydrated precise sulfophenylated polyethylene

ORAL

Abstract

Hydrated acid aggregates in a precise sulfophenylated polyethylene exhibit high proton conductivity. This study focuses on a new precise polymer, synthesized by ring-opening polymerization, that has a polyethylene backbone with a sulfonated phenyl group pendant on every 5th carbon, p5PhSA. The structure of p5PhSA is characterized with X-ray scattering and the proton conductivity is characterized with electrical impedance spectroscopy. Both experiments are performed as a function of relative humidity and temperature. Sorption measurements determined the water uptake in p5PhSA as a function of humidity as well. Atomistic molecular dynamics simulations are used to elucidate the structure of the acid aggregates in the amorphous polymer matrix and are directly compared to absolute X-ray scattering data. At 40°C and 90% relative humidity, the proton conductivity of p5PhSA is 0.17 S/cm, exceeding that of Nafion. At room temperature, interaggregate distance nearly doubles from 1.8 nm at 0% relative humidity, to 3.4 nm at 100% relative humidity. The swelling of these ordered acid aggregates with water is reversible, and facilitates the proton transport through p5PhSA.

*NSF-PIRE 1545884
ANR-15-PIRE-0001

Presenters

  • Benjamin Paren

    • University of Pennsylvania
    • Dept of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Pennsylvania

Authors

  • Benjamin Paren

    • University of Pennsylvania
    • Dept of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Pennsylvania
  • Lionel Picard

    • LITEN-DEHT-SCGE-LM, CEATech
  • Patrice Rannou

    • Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, CEA, INAC-SyMMES
    • CEA-CNRS-University Grenoble Alpes
  • Manuel Marechal

    • Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, CEA, INAC-SyMMES
    • CEA-CNRS-University Grenoble Alpes
  • William Neary

    • Florida State University
  • Aaron Kendrick

    • Florida State University
  • Justin G Kennemur

    • Florida State University
  • Amalie Frischknecht

    • Sandia National Labs
    • Sandia National Laboratories
    • Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, Sandia National Laboratories
  • Karen Winey

    • University of Pennsylvania
    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, U.S.
    • Materials Science and Engineering, University of Pennsylvania
    • Dept of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Pennsylvania