Thermally Cured Sulfonated para-PBI as Ion Solvating Membrane for Use in Water Electrolysis

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Abstract

A sulfonated para-polybenzimidazole (MS-PBI) membrane is thermally cured at 350 °C for 120 minutes. The thus obtained cMS-PBI membrane is insoluble in hot phosphoric acid solution (<5% soluble fraction), and is free of the known breaking points under alkaline conditions, i.e., no aromatic ether bonds, no quaternary ammonium groups, no N-alkylated neutral or positively charged imidazole groups. Indeed, a 6 months long alkaline stability test in 2 M KOH at 80 °C shows that cMS-PBI retains its dimensions and its weight without any sign of degradation. The room temperature conductivity increases within the first 24 days, and then remains constant at 192 ± 10 mS cm−1. At 80 °C, the conductivity in 3 M KOH reaches 682 mS cm−1. At 80 °C and with 2 M KOH feed solution, an electrolyzer using robust nickel foam electrodes has a performance of 0.975 A cm−2 at 2 V. With NiFe/Raney nickel, 3.52 A cm−2 (extrapolated) at 2 V are reached. Voltage remained stable in a 200 hours test. In conclusion, it is expected that ion solvating membranes like cMS-PBI can substitute anion exchange membranes in water electrolyzers, and by this improve their lifetime and reduce the cost of green hydrogen.

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Dayan, A., Lee, D. H., Azizi, K., Cleemann, L. N., Cho, W. C., & Henkensmeier, D. (2025). Thermally Cured Sulfonated para-PBI as Ion Solvating Membrane for Use in Water Electrolysis. Advanced Energy Materials, 15(25). https://doi.org/10.1002/aenm.202500498

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