Beyond Small Molecular Cations: Elucidating the Alkaline Stability of Cationic Moieties at the Membrane Scale

Author:

Ling Qianjun1,Wang Chenxi1,Wang Tao1,Yang Shanzhong1,Li Xueliang1,Wei Haibing12ORCID,Ding Yunsheng12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Polymer Science and Engineering School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Hefei University of Technology Hefei 230009 China

2. Anhui Key Laboratory of Advanced Catalytic Materials and Reaction Engineering Anhui Key Laboratory of Advanced Functional Materials and Devices Hefei University of Technology Hefei 230009 China

Abstract

AbstractA major hindrance in the commercialization of alkaline polyelectrolyte‐based electrochemical energy conversion devices is the development of durable anion exchange membranes (AEMs). Despite many alkali‐stable cations that have been explored, the stability of these cationic moieties at the membrane scale is in the blind. Herein, we present a molecularly designed polyaromatic AEM with cationic moieties in an alternating manner to unbiasedly compare the alkaline stability of piperidinium and ammonium groups at the membrane state. Using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we demonstrate that the pentyltrimethyl group is about 2‐fold more stable than piperidinium within a polyaromatic scaffold, either in ex‐situ alkaline soaking or in‐situ cell operation. This finding challenges the judgment extrapolated from the stability trend of cations, that is, the piperidinium‐functionalized AEM is more alkali‐stable than the counterparts based on quaternary ammoniums. Moreover, the deterioration mechanism of piperidinium moiety after being embedded in polyaromatic backbone is rationalized by density functional theory.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Peking University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Energy,General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Environmental Chemistry

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