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An overview of proton exchange membranes for fuel cells: Materials and manufacturing

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HYDROGEN ENERGY
Volume 47, Issue 44, Pages 19086-19131

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijhydene.2022.04.099

Keywords

Solid polymer electrolytes; Nafion membranes; Proton conductivity; Proton exchange membranes fuel; cell

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Proton exchange membrane fuel cells are considered efficient and clean energy conversion devices, but their high manufacturing cost remains a major barrier to their general acceptance and commercialization. Lowering the cost of the electrolyte and catalyst is the main strategy for reducing fuel cell cost. The development of low-cost and high-performance electrolyte membranes is a top priority.
Due to their efficient and cleaner operation nature, proton exchange membrane fuel cells are considered energy conversion devices for various applications including transportation. However, the high manufacturing cost of the fuel cell system components remains the main barrier to their general acceptance and commercialization. The main strategy for lowering the cost of fuel cells which is critical for their general acceptance as alternative energy sources in a variety of applications is to lower the cost of the electrolyte and catalyst. An electrolyte is one of the most important components in the fuel cell and a major contributor to the cost (>$500/m(2 ) for commercial Nafion (R)( )series). Nafion is widely used as an electrolyte in PEMs, but it has some limitations in addition to high costs such as low proton conductivity, high-temperature performance degradation, and high fuel crossover. Therefore, the development and manufacturing of low-cost and high-performance electrolyte membranes with higher conductivity (~0.1 S (.)cm (-1)) at a wider temperature range is a top priority in the scientific community. Recent years have seen extensive research on the preparation, modification, and properties of PEMs such as non-Nafion membranes (SPI, PBI, polystyrene, polyphosphazene, SPAEK, SPEEK, SPAS, SPEN), and their composites by incorporating functionalized CNTs, GO as fillers to overcome their drawbacks. This paper provides a comprehensive review of membrane materials and manufacturing with a focus on PEMs. In particular, the review brings out the basic mechanism involved in proton conduction, important requirements, historical background, contending technologies, types, advantages and disadvantages, current developments, future goals, and directions design aspects related to thermodynamic and electrochemical principles, system assessment parameters, and the prospects and outlook. (c) 2022 Hydrogen Energy Publications LLC. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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