Does Confinement Mediate Cerium Exchange and Its Impact on Ionomer Properties?
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Abstract
Thin-film ionomers, pivotal in the function of fuel-cell catalyst layers (CLs), are undercharacterized compared to their bulk membrane counterparts, especially with respect to cation effects. Cerium cations, used as an additive in fuel-cell membranes, tend to migrate from the membrane into the CL ionomer during operation. This study investigates whether cerium doping of perfluorinated sulfonic acid ionomer changes under confinement (to a nanometer thin film) and affects the hydration behavior. Confinement has a negligible effect on the ionomer’s cerium partitioning, yet it reduces the ionomer water uptake. Thus, cerium replaces protons similarly in a membrane or CL ionomer; however, its presence affects the thermodynamics of hydration differently.