posted on 2014-09-25, 00:00authored byAleksey Vishnyakov, Alexander V. Neimark
By means of dissipative particle
dynamics (DPD) and Monte Carlo
(MC) simulations, we explored geometrical, transport, and sorption properties of hydrated Nafion-type
polyelectrolyte membranes. Composed of a perfluorinated backbone with
sulfonate side chains, Nafion self-assembles upon hydration and segregates
into interpenetrating hydrophilic and hydrophobic subphases. This
segregated morphology determines the transport properties of Nafion
membranes that are widely used as compartment separators in fuel cells
and other electrochemical devices, as well as permselective diffusion
barriers in protective fabrics. We introduced a coarse-grained model
of Nafion, which accounts explicitly for polymer rigidity and electrostatic
interactions between anionic side chains and hydrated metal cations.
In a series of DPD simulations with increasing content of water, a
classical percolation transition from a system of isolated water clusters
to a 3D network of hydrophilic channels was observed. The hydrophilic
subphase connectivity and water diffusion were studied by constructing
digitized replicas of self-assembled morphologies and performing random
walk simulations. A non-monotonic dependence of the tracer diffusivity
on the water content was found. This unexpected behavior was explained
by the formation of large and mostly isolated water domains detected
at high water content and high equivalent polymer weight. Using MC
simulations, we calculated the chemical potential of water in the
hydrated polymer and constructed the water sorption isotherms, which
extended to the oversaturated conditions. We determined that the maximum
diffusivity and the onset of formation of large water domains corresponded
to the saturation conditions at 100% humidity. The oversaturated membrane
morphologies generated in the canonical ensemble DPD simulations correspond
to the metastable and unstable states of Nafion membrane that are
not realized in the experiments.