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You are here: Home / Publications / Dynamics of benzimidazole ethylphosphonate: a solid-state NMR study of anhydrous composite proton-conducting electrolytes

Z. B Yan, Nicole E De Almeida, Jason W Traer, and Gillian R Goward (2013)

Dynamics of benzimidazole ethylphosphonate: a solid-state NMR study of anhydrous composite proton-conducting electrolytes

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 15(41):17983-17992.

Imidazole phosphate and phosphonate solid acids model the hydrogen-bonding networks and dynamics of the anhydrous electrolyte candidate for proton exchange membrane fuel cells. Solid-state NMR reveals that phosphate and phosphonate anion dynamics dominate the rate of long-range proton transport, and that the presence of a membrane host facilitates proton mobility, as evidenced by a decreased correlation time of the composites (80 +/- 15 ms) relative to the pristine salt (101 +/- 5 ms). Benzimidazole ethylphosphonate (Bi-ePA) is chosen as a model salt to investigate the membrane system. The hydrogen-bonding structure of Bi-ePA is established using X-ray diffraction coupled with solid-state H-1-H-1 DQC NMR. The anion dynamics has been determined using solid-state P-31 CODEX NMR. By comparing the dynamics of ethylphosphonate groups in pristine salt and membrane-salt composites, it is clear that the rotation process involves three-site exchange. Through data interpretation, a stretched exponential function is introduced with the stretching exponent, beta, ranging 0 < beta <= 1. The P-31 CODEX data for pristine salt are fitted with single exponential decay where beta = 1; however, the data for the membrane-salt composites are fitted with stretched exponential functions, where b has a constant value of 0.5. This beta value suggests a non-Gaussian distribution of the dynamic systems in the composite sample, which is introduced by the membrane host.

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