Abstract
The interaction
between ionomer (ion-conducting polymer) and catalyst particles in porous
electrodes of electrochemical energy-conversion devices is a critical yet
poorly understood phenomenon that controls device performance. This interaction
stems from that in the electrode precursor inks, which also governs
porous-electrode morphology during formation. In this letter, we probe the
origin of this interaction in solution to unravel the ionomer/particle
agglomeration process. Quartz-crystal microbalance studies detail ionomer
adsorption (with a range of charge densities) to model surfaces under a variety
of solvent environments, and isothermal-titration-calorimetry experiments
extract thermodynamic binding information to platinum- and carbon-black
nanoparticles. Results reveal that under the conditions tested, ionomer binding
to platinum is similar to carbon, suggesting that adsorption to
platinum-on-carbon catalyst particles in inks is likely dictated mostly by
hydrophobic interactions with the carbon surface. Furthermore, water-rich
solvents (relative to propanol) promote ionomer adsorption. Finally, ionomer
dispersions change with time, yielding dynamic binding interactions.
Supplementary materials
Title
QCM ITC SI chemrxiv
Description
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