4.7 Article

Measuring the alkaline stability of anion-exchange membranes

Journal

JOURNAL OF ELECTROANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 908, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jelechem.2022.116112

Keywords

Anion-exchange membranes; Functional groups; Backbones; Alkaline stability; Fuel cells; Water electrolyzers

Funding

  1. Nancy & Stephen Grand Technion Energy Program (GTEP)
  2. Israel Science Foundation (ISF) [1481/17]
  3. Israel Science Foundation [1934/17]
  4. Ministry of National Infrastructure, Energy and Water Resources of Israel [3-16686 (219-11-135), 3-17591 (22-11-040)]
  5. Planning & Budgeting Committee/ISRAEL Council for Higher Edu-cation (CHE)
  6. Fuel Choice Initiative (Prime Minister Office of ISRAEL) , within Israel National Research Center for Electrochemical Propulsion (INREP)
  7. EPSRC [EP/M014371/1, EP/R044163/1]

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One significant barrier in developing durable anion-exchange membranes for fuel cells and water electrolyzers is their limited chemical stability to alkali. The commonly used ex-situ tests do not adequately simulate the actual operando conditions, yielding misleading degradation rates. The study introduces a unique ex-situ method for determining the alkaline stability of AEMs under in-situ operating environments and provides stability trends for various AEM compositions.
One significant barrier in developing durable, robust anion-exchange membranes (AEMs) for liquid-electrolyte-free fuel cells (AEMFCs) and water electrolyzers (AEMWEs) is their limited chemical stability to alkali. To measure the alkaline stability of AEMs, ex-situ tests are commonly used where the AEMs are immersed for long durations in aqueous alkali solutions. However, such tests do not adequately simulate the liquid-electrolyte-free environment of AEMFCs and AEMWEs, as the hydration and alkaline conditions do not always mimic actual operando conditions, yielding misleading and inaccurate indications of degradation rates for relatively low hydration conditions. We recently reported a unique ex-situ method which determines the alkaline stability of AEMs under conditions that mimic in-situ operating environments. In this study, we apply this technique to determine the alkaline stability of several AEMs containing different functional group and backbone chemistries. The alkaline stability of HDPE-based radiation-grafted (RG)-AEMs containing different functional group chemistries follows the trend: TMA >= MPY similar to MPIP square DEMA > TEA. Radiation-grafted AEMs (and a non-radiation-grafted PPO benchmark) containing different backbones and the same stable TMA group follows the stability order: ETFE >= LDPE > HDPE square PPO. This technique is recommended for ex-situ testing of the alkaline stability of AEMs for both AEMFC and AEMWE applications.

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