| Literature DB >> 34063925 |
Mohammad Ebrahimi1,2, Wojciech Kujawski1, Kateryna Fatyeyeva2, Joanna Kujawa1.
Abstract
Today, the use of polymer electrolyte membranes (PEMs) possessing ionic liquids (ILs) in middle and high temperature polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells (MT-PEMFCs and HT-PEMFCs) have been increased. ILs are the organic salts, and they are typically liquid at the temperature lower than 100 °C with high conductivity and thermal stability. The membranes containing ILs can conduct protons through the PEMs at elevated temperatures (more than 80 °C), unlike the Nafion-based membranes. A wide range of ILs have been identified, including chiral ILs, bio-ILs, basic ILs, energetic ILs, metallic ILs, and neutral ILs, that, from among them, functionalized ionic liquids (FILs) include a lot of ion exchange groups in their structure that improve and accelerate proton conduction through the polymeric membrane. In spite of positive features of using ILs, the leaching of ILs from the membranes during the operation of fuel cell is the main downside of these organic salts, which leads to reducing the performance of the membranes; however, there are some ways to diminish leaching from the membranes. The aim of this review is to provide an overview of these issues by evaluating key studies that have been undertaken in the last years in order to present objective and comprehensive updated information that presents the progress that has been made in this field. Significant information regarding the utilization of ILs in MT-PEMFCs and HT-PEMFCs, ILs structure, properties, and synthesis is given. Moreover, leaching of ILs as a challenging demerit and the possible methods to tackle this problem are approached in this paper. The present review will be of interest to chemists, electrochemists, environmentalists, and any other researchers working on sustainable energy production field.Entities:
Keywords: ionic liquids; leaching; middle and high temperature polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells; polymer electrolyte membranes; proton conductivity
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34063925 PMCID: PMC8196583 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22115430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Overview of the various types of fuel cells with the following operation temperatures: polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) and direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC) RT–100 °C, phosphoric acid fuel cell (PAFC) 150–220 °C, alkaline fuel cell (AFC) RT–250 °C, molten carbonate fuel cell (MCFC) 620–660 °C, and solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) 600–1000 °C. RT = room temperature.
Figure 2The general schematic of PEMFC. Reprinted with permission from Reference [23]. Copyright 2020 De Gruyter.
Different types of ILs and their characteristics.
| Type of Ionic Liquid | Abbreviated Name | Summary and Property | Applications | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chiral ionic liquids | C-ILs | The best option for asymmetric induction in catalysis. Because of the nature of C-ILs, the process of their synthesis is difficult (needed several steps) and expensive. These kinds of ILs are usually synthesized by asymmetric synthesis or chiral pool and they can contain polar, axial or central chirality. | Liquid chiral chromatography, stereo selective polymerization, synthesis of potential active chiral compounds, liquids crystal, NMR chiral discrimination, solvent, electrolyte, and catalyst. | [ |
| Switchable polarity solvent ionic liquids | SPS-ILs | SPS-ILs are usually synthesized by proton transfer reaction. Additionally, SPS-ILs have acceptable resistance against wet condition for synthesis and operation. By adjusting the value for molecular triggers, including CO2 and CS2, the physical features of SPS-ILs can be changed. | Solvent recovery and solute separation. | [ |
| Protic ionic liquids | Pr-ILs | Pr-ILs can be quickly synthesized by transferring hydrogen ion (H+) from a Brønsted acid to a Brønsted base. The process of proton-transfer is boosted by using strong bases or acids or both of them. These ILs have good proton conductivity, fluidity, and low melting point. | Alkaline batteries, fuel cells, dehydration, and choromatogeraphy (both liquid and gas). | [ |
| Bio-ionic liquids | Bio-ILs | Bio-ILs are often produced by sustainable bio-precursors; therefore, they are environmentally friendly, bio-degradable, biocompatible, and non-toxic. They have high thermal (between 220 and 290ºC) stability and solubility (in methanol, Dimethyl sulfoxide, chloroform, and water). | Biodiesel production, renewable diesel and jet fuel, chemical compounds production (like herbicides). | [ |
| Poly- ionic liquids | P-ILs | P-ILs are also known as polymerized ionic liquids. P-ILs refer to a subclass of polyelectrolytes that feature an ionic liquid (IL) species in each monomer repeating unit, connected through a polymeric backbone to form a macromolecular architecture. In spite of the high charge density of P-ILs, they usually have wide glass transition temperature ranges. | Polymer electrolytes, batteries, fuel cells, carbon electrodes, sensors, organic transistors, super capacitors, catalysts, photoresists, and corrosion inhibitors. | [ |
| Energetic ionic liquids | E-ILs | E-ILs have low melting point, and high thermal stability and can be used as eco-friendly explosives. These ILs have very low vapor pressure and structural designability. Due to the great safety and energy, as well as low negative environmental impacts on the eco-system of E-ILs, they can be good alternative instead of energetic materials, such as HMX, RDX, TNT, and CL-20. | Explosives, pyrotechnics, and propellants. | [ |
| Neutral ionic liquids | In these ILs, the electrostatic interactions between anions and cations are typically very weak. Moreover, | Solvent. | [ | |
| Metallic ionic liquids | M-ILs | These types of ILs contain metal halides (e.g., (AlCl3−), (CuCl3−), (SnCl3−), and (Al2Br7−)). M-ILs are highly viscous in comparison with other types of ILs. M-ILs are typically stable under moisture and ambient conditions. | Catalyst, solvent, organometallic chemistry hydration process, and recycling of nuclear waste. | [ |
| Basic ionic liquids | B-ILs | B-ILs are regarded as eco-friendly, flexible, non-volatile, active and selective catalysts; thus, B-ILs are good alternatives for conventional bases (e.g., KOH, NaOH, and NaHCO3). Unlike traditional bases, B-ILs do not suffer from environmental issue, waste production, and corrosion. | Organic transformation (e.g., Michael addition, aldol condensation, Knoevenagel condensation, Henry reaction, oximation, and Michael reaction), catalyst, and solvent. | [ |
| Supported ionic liquids | S-ILs | The use of S-ILs have been increased because of high cost of pure ILs utilization. These ILs are usually benefited from silica support; hence, the requirement for using ILs significantly reduced. The application of S-ILs can accelerate exploitation of ILs in industrial and commercial processes. | Solvent, catalyst, reactor systems, and separation process. | [ |
Figure 3Typical synthesis of the primary ILs by alkylation. Reprinted from Reference [123] under the license CCBYNCND 3.0. Copyright 2015 Longdom.
Figure 4Synthesis of secondary ILs via metathesis reaction. Reprinted with permission from Reference [123]. Copyright 2016 Elsevier.
Figure 5Synthesis of secondary ILs via acid-base neutralization reaction. Reprinted with permission from Reference [123]. Copyright 2016 Elsevier.
The influence of different types of FILs on PEM performance.
| Type of FIL | Membrane Compositions | Preparation Technique | Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sulfonate and sulfate | EB/Y2O3/SPEEK | Solution casting | Both ILs improved thermal stability (up to 250–350 °C), and water uptake of composite membranes. BS/Y2O3/SPEEK composite membrane showed the highest conductivity at 90 °C and at 50% and 100% RH. EB/Y2O3/SPEEK composite sample demonstrated the highest mechanical stability of 2.61 MPa. | [ |
| (TEA-PS)(HSO4)/PBI/SPEEK | Solution casting | Oxidative stability, and proton conductivity were increased by addition of PBI/IL into the membrane. | [ | |
| (BMI)(HSO4)/SPEEK | Solution casting | The thermal stability was improved up to 200 °C. | [ | |
| (dema)(OTf)/silica/SPEEK | Sol-gel | The composite membranes were studied at elevated temperature and under anhydrous environment. | [ | |
| (EIm)(TfO)/silica/poly(styrene-co-acrylonitrile) | Solution casting followed by photo cross-linking | The resultant membranes were thermally stable up to 300 °C. | [ | |
| (MIm)(TfO)/(APMIm)(Br)-GO/poly(styrene-co-acrylonitrile) | Solution casting followed by photo cross-linking | The usage of IL increased significantly thermal stability up to 400 °C. | [ | |
| (BMIm)(TfO)/Nafion | Solution casting | The composite membranes revealed good performance under both hydrous and anhydrous conditions. | [ | |
| Imide | (VBIm)(NTf2)/H2PO4−/poly(styrene-co-acrylonitrile) | Solution casting followed by photo cross linking | The composite sample showed proton conductivity of 4.14·102 S/cm at 180 °C without humidification. | [ |
| PDC3/PA/PBI | Solution casting | The composite membranes composed of PDC3 illustrated higher proton conductivity and thermal stability than the membrane containing PMC6. | [ | |
| (MIm)(TFSI)/Matrimid® (EIm)(TFSI)/Matrimid® | Phase inversion | All composite membranes were thermally stable between 360 and 400 °C. | [ | |
| (h-mim)(Ntf2)/PBI | Solution casting | The maximum ionic conductivity was 1.86 mS/cm at 190 °C. | [ | |
| Phosphate | (N111)(H2PO4)/PP-NW | Reciprocating rolling process | The composite home-made membrane presented high current density of 600 mA/cm2 at 0.1 V, 140 °C, and under aqueous-free situation. | [ |
| Phosphonated IL-SBA-15/SPEEK | Solution casting | Addition of composite content (PIL-SBA-15) resulted in enhancing the water uptake. | [ | |
| (MIm)(H2PO4)-co-GO/ SPI | Solution casting | The maximum proton conductivity was 0.0772 S/cm at 160 °C. | [ | |
| (DMBuIm)(H2PO4)/ GO/Nafion | Solution casting | The thermal stability of composite membrane was boosted up to 300 °C. | [ | |
| (C4im)(BEHP)/Matrimid®
| Phase inversion | Unlike Nafion membrane, the proton conductivity of composite samples had a direct correlation with temperature. | [ | |
| (BEBzIm)(H2PO4)/ABPBI/PA | Solution casting | The addition of (BEBzIm)(H2PO) had a strong effect on thermal stability. | [ |
A summary report with regard to ILs leakage and several techniques for its diminishing.
| Membrane | Types of Investigations Concerning IL Leaching | Observations | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| (EMIm)(DEP)/SPEEK | Influence of the IL content. | The results confirmed that the enhancement of both IL content and operation temperature resulted in increasing the proton conductivity, in which the maximum conductivity was 3.16·10−3 Scm−1 at 145 °C for membrane with 50 wt% IL. | [ |
| (bmim)(OTf)/SPEK | Influence of the operation temperature, hydrophilicity or hydrophobicity nature, and content of ILs. | The results revealed the rising the temperature brought about increasing the leakage. | [ |
| (EIm)(TFSI)/PVDF-co-HFP | Utilization of inorganic compounds (Al2O3 or SiO2) and various cations. | (MPy)(TFSI)/PVDF-co-HFP composite membrane (with 60 wt% (MPy)(TFSI)) showed the least IL leakage among all membranes containing ILs (the order of ILs leakage is: (EIm)(TFSI) > (MIm)(TFSI) > (MPy)(TFSI)). | [ |
| (dema)(OTf)/SiO2/SPEEK | Influence of the sulfonation degree and silica addition of silica. | The results illustrated that, by increasing the sulfonation degree, IL leaching were decreased from the membranes. The main reason is that the existence of electrostatic interaction between ILs cation and sulfonic groups (on the structure of SPEEK) can diminish the leaching of ILs from the membranes. | [ |
| (EIm)(TfO)/(TMI)(Cl)-silica NPs/polymerizable oil | Using SiO2 NPs. | Due to the fact that SiO2 NPs are nanoscaled, they can be easily dispersed into the membrane and could react with IL; hence, the composite samples comprising NPs indicated much better retention ability than pristine ones. | [ |
| (EIm)(TfO)/mesoporous silica/SPEEK | Influence of mesoporous silica and different types of IL cations. | Employing porous silica decreased the weight loss of ILs because not only does silica hold a number of reactive sites in its structure, but it also provides large pores which can trap ILs. | [ |
| PAMAM G4.0-NH3+H2PO4− PAMAM G4.0-NH3+HSO4− PAMAM G4.0-NH3+Tf2N− | Influence of the nature of ILs. | The hydrophilic ILs-based membranes ((PAMAM G4.0-NH3+HSO4−)) > PAMAM G4.0-NH3+H2PO4−)) showed a better conductivity, whereas the hydrophobic one ((PAMAM G4.0-NH3+Tf2N−)) had better stability with regard to leakage phenomenon. | [ |
| Ceramic nanofiltration module/((C3H7)4N)(B(CN)4))/silicon | Influence of coating silicon. | The multiphase membrane containing ceramic nanofiltration module/((C3H7)4N)(B(CN)4)) was coated by silicon showed the highest seperation factor of 177. | [ |