Proton hopping in phosphoric acid solvated nafion membrane: a molecular simulation study

J Phys Chem B. 2007 Jun 14;111(23):6357-63. doi: 10.1021/jp071005m. Epub 2007 May 23.

Abstract

Molecular simulation studies of the microstructure and of the proton transport properties of phosphoric acid solvated Nafion membrane are carried out. The ab initio calculations show that the phosphoric acid is a good solvent to promote the proton ionization of the sulfonic acid group, and only two phosphoric acid molecules are necessary for the dissociation of one sulfonic acid group. A mechanism of proton hopping between phosphoric acid and protonated phosphoric acid cation in the hydrophilic subphase is also elucidated by ab initio calculations. The molecular dynamics simulations, conducted at a phosphoric acid concentration of 25.4% (wt) which is slightly lower than that of phosphoric acid swollen Nafion, show that the phosphoric acid exists in subphases and that it cannot develop into a continuous subphase. Thus, proton-hopping pathways are interrupted, and the conductivity is expected to be lower than that for pure phosphoric acid. The molecular dynamics simulations, conducted at a phosphoric acid concentration of 45.1% (wt) which corresponds to an unstable state, show that the hydrophobic poly(tetrafluoroethylene) backbones trend to gather together forming hydrophobic clusters and that the phosphoric acid forms a continuous subphase with the sulfonic acid groups located at the hydrophobic/hydrophilic interface. Thus, proton-hopping pathways can develop uninterruptedly like the pure phosphoric acid, and high conductivity is expected. The molecular dynamics study also shows that the hydrogen-bonding characteristics of phosphoric acid and sulfonate anion are similar regardless of the factor that the former can move freely while the latter is attached to Nafion backbone.