Polymer Backbone Chemistry Shapes the Alkaline Stability of Metallopolymer Anion‐Exchange Membranes

Author:

Aggarwal Kanika1,Li Songlin2,Nijem Sally1,Dekel Dario R.23ORCID,Diesendruck Charles E.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Schulich Faculty of Chemistry Technion – Israel Institute of Technology Haifa Israel – 3200003

2. The Wolfson Department of Chemical Engineering Technion – Israel Institute of Technology Haifa Israel – 3200003

3. The Nancy & Stephen Grand Technion Energy Program (GTEP) Technion – Israel Institute of Technology Haifa Israel – 3200003

Abstract

AbstractAnion‐exchange membrane fuel cells and water electrolyzers have garnered significant attention in past years due to their potential role in sustainable and affordable energy conversion and storage. However, the chemical stability of the polymeric anion‐exchange membranes (AEMs), the key component in these devices, currently limits their lifespan. Recently, metallopolymers have been proposed as chemically stable alternatives to organic cations, using metal centers as ion transporters. In metallopolymer AEMs, various properties such as alkaline stability, water uptake, flexibility, and performance, are determined by both the metal complex and polymer backbone. Herein we present a systematic study investigating the influence of the polymer backbone chemistry on some of these properties, focusing on the alkaline stability of low‐oxophilicity gold metallopolymers. Despite the use of a common N‐heterocyclic carbene ligand, upon gold metalation using the same reaction conditions, different polymer backbones end up forming different gold complexes. These findings suggest that polymer chemistry affects the metalation reaction in addition to the other properties relevant to AEM performance.

Funder

Ministry of Energy, Israel

Israel Science Foundation

Ministry of Science and Technology, Israel

Publisher

Wiley

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