Publication | Closed Access
Differences in water sorption and proton conductivity between Nafion and SPEEK
137
Citations
60
References
2011
Year
Solid-state IonicPercolation ThresholdChemical EngineeringProton ConductivityWater SorptionEngineeringPhysicochemical AnalysisMineral-fluid InteractionPhysical ChemistryChemistryMembrane PermeationElectrochemistry
Abstract Water sorption, volumetric expansion, and proton conductivity of 1100 EW Nafion and 555 EW sulfonated polyetheretherketone (SPEEK) were compared as functions of water activity at 60 and 80 °C. Water sorption in Nafion occurs with a small positive volume of mixing, ∼0.005 cm 3 /cm 3 . In contrast, water sorption in SPEEK has a large negative volume of mixing ∼−0.05 cm 3 /cm 3 . The percolation thresholds for proton conduction occur at hydrophilic volume fractions of 0.10 in Nafion and 0.30 in SPEEK. Proton conductivity increases quadratically with hydrophilic volume fraction above the percolation threshold. The different percolation thresholds suggest the hydrophilic domains in Nafion grow from lamella, whereas the hydrophilic domains in SPEEK grow from spheres. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 49: 1437–1445, 2011
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1