화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics, Vol.40, No.4, 387-400, 2002
Small-angle neutron scattering investigation of structural changes in Nafion membranes induced by swelling with various solvents
The structure of Nafion-117 perfluorosulfonate ionomer membranes was investigated with small-angle neutron scattering techniques. Structural changes induced by the swelling of the membranes with water, alcohols, and dipolar, aprotic solvents were monitored at solvent-swelling levels ranging from approximately 2 vol % to greater than 50 vol %. Membranes swollen up to approximately 50 vol % solvent exhibited two scattering maxima, one known to be associated with ionic regions of the membrane structure and one known to be associated with correlation distances between crystalline regions in the membrane structure. The positions of both maxima shifted toward lower scattering vector values as the solvent content in the membrane increased. The shift in the position of both maxima was linearly related to the solvent volume fraction in the membrane. The Bragg spacings corresponding to both the ionic-feature scattering maximum and the crystalline-feature scattering maximum were plotted versus the solvent volume fraction in the membranes, and the data fit with linear regression. The slopes associated with the curves of the spacing versus the solvent volume fraction were greater for the crystalline-feature spacing than for the ionic-feature spacing for all solvents other than water; this was indicative of preferential segregation of nonaqueous solvents into regions of the structure not directly associated with the ionic scattering maximum.