Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry, Vol.45, No.16, 3747-3758, 2007
Synthesis and characterization of polyimide-polysiloxane segmented copolymers for fuel cell applications
Sulfonated polyimides exhibit high strength, good film-forming ability, chemical resistance, and, in their hydrated state, relatively high proton conductivity. Here we report the one-pot synthesis of sulfonated polyimide-polysiloxane segmented copolymers through the reaction of a dianhydride with a mixture of three diamines: a nonionic aromatic diamine (4,4'-oxydianiline), a sulfonated diamine (4,4'-diamino-2,2'-biphenyldisulfonic acid), and a telechelic diamino polysiloxane. Copolymer compositions were evaluated using H-1 NMR and size-exclusion chromatography. The presence of ion-containing diamines in the reaction mixture inhibited stoichiometric incorporation of hydrophobic siloxane segments. Siloxane segments were found to lower the thermal stability of the polyimide host. Copolymers with and without siloxane segments were cast into free-standing films. Equilibrium water sorption studies of cast films show that, for the compositions studied here, the presence of siloxane segments does not interfere with water swelling, suggesting that a microphase-segregated morphology may exist. TEM and SAXS analyses show evidence of phase-segregation in sulfonated polyimides and reveal that siloxane segments strongly affect ionic clustering. However, proton conductivity only changes slightly when polysiloxane segments are incorporated. (C) 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.