Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5150477 | Solid State Ionics | 2017 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The vanadium ion permeability of various ion-conducting polymer membranes was determined using a home-made apparatus. The study includes proton-conducting sulfonated poly(ether ether ketone) (SPEEK) with various cross-linking degrees, anion-conducting membranes, such as polysulfone with quaternary ammonium groups (PSU-QA) and sulfaminated PEEK (SA-PEEK), and amphoteric membranes based on PEEK containing both sulfonic and sulfonamide groups (SAM-PEEK) that can conduct both cations and anions. The polymer structure was investigated by NMR spectroscopy. The permeability of SPEEK decreases with the cross-linking degree and can be up to two orders below the permeability of a Nafion 117 reference membrane (1.4 · 10â 6 cm2 minâ 1). The cation permeability of SA-PEEK attains values as low as 5.0 · 10â 10 cm2 minâ 1, whereas amphoteric SAM-PEEK has a cation permeability of 7.0 · 10â 10 cm2 minâ 1. A factor or merit is introduced, defined as the ratio of ion conductivity and ion permeability; the highest value, corresponding to the best compromise of high ion conductivity and low permeability of electrochemically active ions, is found for highly cross-linked SPEEK, SA-PEEK and SAM-PEEK membranes. The influence of the polymer backbone (PEEK or PSU), the degree of cross-linking, determined by NMR spectroscopy, and the grafted ionic groups (sulfonic acid, sulfammonium, and quaternary ammonium) on the cation permeability is discussed.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Electrochemistry
Authors
P. Knauth, L. Pasquini, M.L. Di Vona,