4.6 Article

Proton transport in choline dihydrogen phosphate/H3PO4 mixtures

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 12, Issue 37, Pages 11291-11298

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c0cp00156b

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council through the ARC Center of Excellence for Electromaterials Science

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Mixtures of the plastic crystal material choline dihydrogen phosphate [Choline][DHP] and phosphoric acid, from 4.5 mol% to 18 mol% H3PO4, were investigated and shown to have significantly higher proton conductivity compared to the pure [Choline][DHP]. This was particularly evident from the electrochemical hydrogen reduction reaction and the proton NMR diffusion measurements, in addition to ionic conductivity measured from the impedance spectroscopy. The ionic conductivity was observed to increase by more than an order of magnitude in phase I (i.e. the highest temperature solid phase in [Choline][DHP]) reaching up to 10(-2) S cm(-1). The multinuclear NMR spectroscopy data suggest that, at least on the timescale of the NMR measurement, the H (+) cations and [DHP] anions are equivalent in both phases. The pulsed field gradient NMR diffusion measurements of the 18 mol% acid sample indicate that all three ions are mobile, however the H + diffusion coefficient is an order of magnitude higher than for the [Choline] cation or the [DHP] anion, and therefore conduction in these materials is dominated by proton conductivity. The thermal stability, as measured by TGA, is unaffected with increasing acid additions and remains high; i.e. no significant mass loss below 200 degrees C.

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