| Literature DB >> 29895945 |
Xiaolin Ge1, Yubin He1, Xian Liang1, Liang Wu2, Yuan Zhu1, Zhengjin Yang3, Min Hu1, Tongwen Xu4.
Abstract
Synthetic polyelectrolytes, capable of fast transporting protons, represent a challenging target for membrane engineering in so many fields, for example, fuel cells, redox flow batteries, etc. Inspired by the fast advance in molecular machines, here we report a rotaxane basedEntities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29895945 PMCID: PMC5997710 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04733-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Synthesis of a rotaxane based polymer entity. a Poly(Crown ether), 1, was synthesized via polyacylation and the host–guest interaction between 1 and 2 results in rotaxane based polymer assembly, 3. b End-capping of 3 was performed to prevent the diffusion loss of movable axles, leading to 4. c N-acetylation of 4 leads to the target polymer, 5, having axles with enhanced mobility. For synthetic details and characterizations, see Supplementary Figs. 1–13
Fig. 2Probing host–guest interaction in the rotaxane based polymer assembly. a 1H-NMR spectra (from top to bottom) of linear axles precursor 2, (400 MHz, DMSO-d6, 298 K), the poly(crown ether) 1, (400 MHz, CDCl3, 298 K), polyrotaxane 4 (assembled from the 1 and 2 via host–guest interaction, 400 MHz, DMSO-d6, 298 K) and N-acetylated polyrotaxane, 5 (400 MHz, DMSO-d6, 298 K). b NOSEY spectrum of polyrotaxane 4 from the assembly of 1 and 2 (400 MHz, DMSO-d6, 298 K). c NOSEY spectrum of N-acetylated polyrotaxane, 5 (400 MHz, DMSO-d6, 298 K)
Properties of the polyrotaxane proton exchange membranes
| Membrane | Grating ratio (GR)a | Ion exchange capacity (IEC) | Water uptake (WU) | Mechanical properties (60 °C, wet)c | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 °C | 60 °C | 30 °C | 60 °C | |||||
| Polyrotaxane | 79.9% | 0.73 (mmol g−1) | 18.2% | 76.6% | 14 | 58 | 12.01 | 20.69 |
aGrafting ratio, calculated from the content of the sulfonated axles and crown ether moieties based on the elemental analysis results
bλ, Water content ratio, a molar ratio of water molecules to the sulfonated axles, calculated from WU and IEC
cTS, tensile strength measured in the stress–strain curve; Eb, elongation at break
Fig. 3Appearance, thermal responsive 1H-NMR and temperature-dependent proton conductivity of the polyrotaxane membrane. a Digital photos of polyrotaxane membrane samples, showing the thermal responsive transparency change in membrane appearance, from bottom to top: dry membrane sample, hydrated membrane sample (treated in 60 °C water for 2 h) and re-dried membrane sample. b 1H-NMR spectra (400 MHz, D2O) of membrane samples immersed in D2O as the temperature was increased from 40 to 60 °C, and spectrum recorded from the same NMR tube after removing the membrane sample (top spectrum). c Proton conductivities of polyrotaxane membrane and the benchmark Nafion-117 as a function of temperature. The error bars represent the s.d. from three independent measurements
Fig. 4Proton conductivity of polyrotaxane membranes. a Proton conductivity of polyrotaxane membranes with varied IEC values as a function of temperature. b Proton conductivity of the polyrotaxane membrane (IEC = 0.73 mmol g−1) as a function of temperature at 30% RH and 60% RH. c Proton conductivity of the polyrotaxane membrane (IEC = 0.73 mmol g−1) before and after N-acetylation as a function of temperature. The error bars represent the s.d. from three independent measurements