Radiation-grafted anion-exchange membranes (RG-AEM) are being developed to evaluate a range of chemistries that have relevance to a variety of electrochemical applications including reverse electrodialysis (RED) salinity gradient power. RG-AEMs...
The performance of zero-gap CO2 electrolysis
(CO2E) is significantly influenced by the membrane’s
chemical
structure and physical properties due to its effects on the local
reaction environment and water/ion transport. Radiation-grafted anion-exchange
membranes (RG-AEM) have demonstrated high ionic conductivity and durability,
making them a promising alternative for CO2E. These membranes
were fabricated using two different thicknesses of ethylene-tetrafluoroethylene
polymer substrates (25 and 50 μm) and three different headgroup
chemistries: benzyl-trimethylammonium, benzyl-N-methylpyrrolidinium,
and benzyl-N-methylpiperidinium (MPIP). Our membrane
characterization and testing in zero-gap cells over Ag electrocatalysts
under commercially relevant conditions showed correlations between
the water uptake, ionic conductivity, hydration, and cationic-head
groups with the CO2E efficiency. The thinner 25 μm-based
AEM with the MPIP-headgroup (ion-exchange capacities of 2.1 ±
0.1 mmol g–1) provided balanced in situ test characteristics
with lower cell potentials, high CO selectivity, reduced liquid product
crossover, and enhanced water management while maintaining stable
operation compared to the commercial AEMs. The CO2 electrolyzer
with an MPIP-AEM operated for over 200 h at 150 mA cm–2 with CO selectivities up to 80% and low cell potentials (around
3.1 V) while also demonstrating high conductivities and chemical stability
during performance at elevated temperatures (above 60 °C).
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