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Effect of Dispersion Medium Composition and Ionomer Concentration on the Microstructure and Rheology of Fe-N-C Platinum Group Metal-free Catalyst Inks for Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cells. | LitMetric

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Article Abstract

We present an investigation of the microstructure and rheological behavior of catalyst inks consisting of Fe-N-C platinum group metal-free catalysts and a perfluorosulfonic acid ionomer in a dispersion medium (DM) of water and 1-propanol (PA). The effects of the ionomer-to-catalyst (I/C) ratio and weight percentage of water (HO %) in the DM on the ink microstructure were studied. Steady-shear and dynamic-oscillatory-shear rheology, in combination with synchrotron X-ray scattering, was utilized to understand interparticle interactions and the level of agglomeration of the inks. In the absence of the ionomer, the inks were significantly agglomerated, approaching a gel-like microstructure for catalyst concentrations as low as 2 wt %. The effect of HO % in the DM on particle agglomeration was found to vary with particle concentration. In concentrated inks (≥2 wt % catalyst), increasing HO % was found to increase agglomeration because of the hydrophobic nature of the catalysts. In dilute inks (<1 wt % catalyst), the trend was reversed with increasing HO %, suggesting that electrostatic interactions are dominating the behavior. In inks with 5 wt % catalyst, the addition of an ionomer was found to significantly stabilize the catalyst against agglomeration. Maximum stability was observed at 0.35 I/C for all DM HO % studied. At high ionomer concentrations (I/C > 0.35), interesting differences were observed between PA-rich inks (HO % ≤ 50%) and HO-rich (82% HO) inks. The PA-rich inks remained predominantly stable-ink viscosity only weakly increased with I/C and the Newtonian behavior was maintained for I/C up to 0.9. In contrast, the HO-rich inks exhibited a significant increase in viscoelasticity with increasing I/C, suggesting flocculation of the catalyst by the ionomer. These differences suggest that the nature of the interactions between the ionomer and catalyst is highly dependent on the HO % in the DM.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.0c02015DOI Listing

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