PBI nanofiber mat-reinforced anion exchange membranes with covalently linked interfaces for use in water electrolysers

Authors
Najibah, M.Tsoy, E.Khalid, H.Chen, Y.Li, Q.Bae, C.Hn?t, J.Plevov?, M.Bouzek, K.Jang, J.H.Park, H.S.Henkensmeier, D.
Issue Date
2021-12
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
Journal of Membrane Science, v.640
Abstract
Anion exchange membranes (AEM) are key components in anion exchange membrane water electrolysers. Recently developed materials are less susceptible to the alkaline degradation of the polymer backbone and quaternary ammonium groups. A remaining challenge is the mechanical stability in contact with hot water and dimensional stability when the temperature of the feed solution changes. One solution is to reinforce membranes with a porous support. Since support materials like PEEK or PTFE have a different swelling behavior than the matrix and no strong interactions with the matrix, voids can form, and gas crossover increases. In this work, we approach this issue by pore filling polybenzimidazole nanofiber mats with the bromomethylated precursor of mTPN, an ultra-stable AEM material. During drying, a covalent interaction between support (PBI amine groups) and matrix (-CH2Br) is established. After quaternization, the optimized PBI/mTPN-50.120 composite membrane still shows a high conductivity of 62 mS cm?1, but 37% reduced length swelling in comparison to the non-reinforced membrane. Tensile strength and Young's modulus increase 17% and 56% to 49 MPa and 680 MPa, respectively. In an electrolyser, a stable voltage of 1.98V at 0.25 A cm?2 was achieved, and no change in membrane resistance was observed over the test time of 200 h (50 °C, 1 M KOH, catalysts based on Ni/Fe and Mo). ? 2021 The Authors
Keywords
Composite membranes; Elastic moduli; Ions; Mechanical stability; Nanofibers; Potassium hydroxide; Reinforcement; Swelling; Tensile strength; Alkaline degradation; Feed solution; Hot water; matrix; Nanofiber mats; Polybenzmidazole; Polymer backbones; Quaternary ammonium group; Water electrolyser; Water electrolysis; Ion exchange membranes; imidazole derivative; nanofiber; nitrogen; polybenzmidazole; unclassified drug; water; anion exchange; Article; artificial membrane; atmosphere; catalyst; chemical interaction; conductance; covalent bond; electrolysis; electrospinning; evaporation; membrane resistance; nanofabrication; quaternization; tensile strength; Young modulus; Anion Exchange; Ions; Membranes; Potassium Hydroxide; Reinforcement; Swelling; Tensile Strength; Water; Anion exchange membrane; Electrospinning; Nanofiber mat; Polybenzmidazole; Water electrolysis
ISSN
0376-7388
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/116023
DOI
10.1016/j.memsci.2021.119832
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2021
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

BROWSE