Literature DB >> 29331134

Coarse-grained model of nanoscale segregation, water diffusion, and proton transport in Nafion membranes.

Aleksey Vishnyakov1, Runfang Mao1, Ming-Tsung Lee1, Alexander V Neimark1.   

Abstract

We present a coarse-grained model of the acid form of Nafion membrane that explicitly includes proton transport. This model is based on a soft-core bead representation of the polymer implemented into the dissipative particle dynamics (DPD) simulation framework. The proton is introduced as a separate charged bead that forms dissociable Morse bonds with water beads. Morse bond formation and breakup artificially mimics the Grotthuss hopping mechanism of proton transport. The proposed DPD model is parameterized to account for the specifics of the conformations and flexibility of the Nafion backbone and sidechains; it treats electrostatic interactions in the smeared charge approximation. The simulation results qualitatively, and in many respects quantitatively, predict the specifics of nanoscale segregation in the hydrated Nafion membrane into hydrophobic and hydrophilic subphases, water diffusion, and proton mobility. As the hydration level increases, the hydrophilic subphase exhibits a percolation transition from a collection of isolated water clusters to a 3D network of pores filled with water embedded in the hydrophobic matrix. The segregated morphology is characterized in terms of the pore size distribution with the average size growing with hydration from ∼1 to ∼4 nm. Comparison of the predicted water diffusivity with the experimental data taken from different sources shows good agreement at high and moderate hydration and substantial deviation at low hydration, around and below the percolation threshold. This discrepancy is attributed to the dynamic percolation effects of formation and rupture of merging bridges between the water clusters, which become progressively important at low hydration, when the coarse-grained model is unable to mimic the fine structure of water network that includes singe molecule bridges. Selected simulations of water diffusion are performed for the alkali metal substituted membrane which demonstrate the effects of the counter-ions on membrane self-assembly and transport. The hydration dependence of the proton diffusivity reproduces semi-qualitatively the trend of the diverse experimental data, showing a sharp decrease around the percolation threshold. Overall, the proposed model opens up an opportunity to study self-assembly and water and proton transport in polyelectrolytes using computationally efficient DPD simulations, and, with further refinement, it may become a practical tool for theory informed design and optimization of perm-selective and ion-conducting membranes with improved properties.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 29331134     DOI: 10.1063/1.4997401

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Chem Phys        ISSN: 0021-9606            Impact factor:   3.488


  3 in total

Review 1.  DPD Modelling of the Self- and Co-Assembly of Polymers and Polyelectrolytes in Aqueous Media: Impact on Polymer Science.

Authors:  Karel Procházka; Zuzana Limpouchová; Miroslav Štěpánek; Karel Šindelka; Martin Lísal
Journal:  Polymers (Basel)       Date:  2022-01-20       Impact factor: 4.329

2.  Mesoscale Modeling of Agglomeration of Molecular Bottlebrushes: Focus on Conformations and Clustering Criteria.

Authors:  Sidong Tu; Chandan K Choudhury; Michaela Giltner; Igor Luzinov; Olga Kuksenok
Journal:  Polymers (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-09       Impact factor: 4.967

Review 3.  Perspective: Morphology and ion transport in ion-containing polymers from multiscale modeling and simulations.

Authors:  Zhenghao Zhu; Stephen J Paddison
Journal:  Front Chem       Date:  2022-08-19       Impact factor: 5.545

  3 in total

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