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- Molecular Modeling of Fuel Cells and Electrochemical Systems I
- (431a) Stability Of Cationic Headgroups In Alkaline Anion-Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells
Electronic structure calculations with a polarizable continuum model (Gaussian 03 software,B3LYP/6-311++g(2d,p) level theory) of aqueous tetramethylammonium ([N(CH3)4]+) cations revealed two mechanisms of degradation. In the first mechanism, the OH- attacks a methyl group on the [N(CH3)4]+ in SN2 fashion and forms CH3OH and trimethylamine (N(CH3)3). In the second mechanism the OH- extracts a proton from a CH3 group and leads to the formation of water and a ylide - trimethyl ammonium methylide ((CH3)3 N+ (CH2)-). This ylide complex then undergoes additional degradation and forms methanol and trimethylamine. Reaction paths for both these mechanisms were obtained with the growing string method [2]. The highest saddle point in both mechanisms are equivalent and the activation barrier is +13.5 kcal/mol. Experimental measurements confirms (Mass Spectroscopy and Thermogravimetric Analysis) that CH3OH and trimethylamine are formed during the degradation of the model compound tetramethylammonium hydroxide pentahydrate (N(CH3)4OH-(H2O)5) . Mass spectrometry during the degradation of the deuterated version ((CH3)4N][OD](D2O)5) shows the scrambling of D and H on the methyl groups and thus confirms the presence of the ylide mechanism.
DFT calculations were repeated by changing the di-electric constant of the polarizable continuum medium. It was found that OH- becomes more reactive (i.e., smaller activation barrier) when the dielectric constant is reduced. This is expected because OH- will be poorly solvated at low dielectric constants.
Ab-initio MD simulations (VASP software, PW91 exchange) with one tetramethylammonium, one OH-, and n water molecules (n = 0 .. 4) showed that the head group is attacked by hydroxide when n=0 or n=1. However when four water molecules are present in the system the OH- is well solvated by the water molecules and no reaction is observed. Ab-initio MD simulations in a periodic cell with 48 water molecules also show no reaction. Radial distribution functions obtained from such simulations show that hydroxide is not tightly bound near the TMA+ cation. This is because the +1 charge of tetramethylammonium is spread uniformly around the bulky cation.
These results imply that a OH- anion that is not well hydrated will attack the cationic head groups in the AAEM. An alkaline membrane operating under relatively dry conditions will degrade much faster compared to a well hydrated membrane.
REFERENCES
[1] Prospects for alkaline anion-exchange membranes in low temperature fuel cells.; Varcoe, JR and Slade, RCT; Fuel Cells; 2005 (5), pp 187-200.
[2] A growing string method for determining transition states: comparison to the nudged elastic band and string methods.; Peters B, Heyden A, Bell AT, and Chakraborty A; J. Chem. Phys.; 2004 (120), pp 7877-7886.