Journal of Applied Polymer Science, Vol.108, No.6, 3577-3585, 2008
Thermal properties of proton-conducting radiation-grafted membranes
Proton-exchange membranes are required to exhibit chemical, mechanical, and thermal stability for fuel cell applications. The present investigation has been carried out to explore the thermal behavior of poly(ethylene-alt-tetrafluoroethylene) (ETFE)-based proton-conducting membranes, both uncrosslinked and crosslinked, prepared by radiation grafting and subsequent sulfonation. The influence of preparation steps (irradiation, grafting, sulfonation, crosslinking) on the thermal degradation, crystallinity, and melting behavior of membranes with varying degree of grafting was examined. ETFE base film and grafted films were studied as the reference materials. Furthermore, poly(tetrafluoroethylene-co-hexafluoropropylene)-based grafted films and membranes were investigated as well for comparison. Membrane preparation steps, degree of grafting, crosslinking, type of base poly-mer have considerable influence on the thermal properties of membranes. The crystallinity of the films decreases slightly by grafting, while a significant decrease was observed after sulfonation. For instance, crystallinity decreased from 37% (pristine ETFE) to 36% (uncrosslinked grafted film) and 23% (uncrosslinked ETFE-based membrane). On the other hand, the melting temperature of the base polymer was almost unaffected by irradiation and grafting. The crosslinked ETFE-based membranes exhibit a slightly higher melting temperature (262.5 degrees C) than their corresponding grafted films (261.3 degrees C) and the base film (260.6 degrees C). (c) 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:thermal properties;membranes;irradiation;differential scanning calorimetry;thermogravimetric analysis