Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7736431 | Journal of Power Sources | 2014 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Composite membranes, made of an 830 equivalent weight short-side-chain perfluorosulfonic acid ionomer and containing up to 10 wt% zirconium phosphate (ZrP), are prepared by casting dispersions of ZrP nanoparticles in the ionomer solution. 30 μm thick composite membranes are characterized by transmission electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, stress-strain tests, conductivity measurements, water uptake and ion-exchange capacity determinations, as well as fuel cell tests in H2/air. In comparison with the neat ionomer, the tensile modulus (E) and the yield stress (Y) of the composite membranes increase with the ZrP content, both at room temperature (ÎE/E up to +75%, ÎY/Y up to +47%) and at 80 °C/70% relative humidity (ÎE/E up to +64%, ÎY/Y up to +103%). Despite their lower hydration, the composite membranes are as conductive as the neat ionomer and the in-plane conductivity at 110 °C ranges from â¼0.005 S cmâ1 at 25% RH to 0.14 S cmâ1 at 90% RH. The fuel cell performance of a catalyst coated membrane loaded with 10 wt% ZrP is weakly affected by temperature in the range 80-110 °C. The peak power density decreases from 0.36 W cmâ2, at 80 °C, to 0.28 W cmâ2 at 110 °C, where the composite membrane performs better than the neat ionomer.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Electrochemistry
Authors
Mario Casciola, Paula Cojocaru, Anna Donnadio, Stefano Giancola, Luca Merlo, Yannig Nedellec, Monica Pica, Surya Subianto,