Abstract

We perform combined temperature-accelerated and standard molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to elucidate the atomistic structure of hydrated Nafion (hydration level λ = 6.5) in the slab and cylinder morphologies. Our samples are initially made of elongated Nafion strands with a relatively small fraction of gauche defects. Our simulations show that even very long (>50 ns) “brute force” MD simulations are insufficient to reach equilibrated structures. In fact, ∼30–40 ns long temperature-accelerated molecular dynamics (TAMD) simulations started from the same initial conditions explore more stable (lower potential energy) stationary structures. The effect of TAMD is to allow a rearrangement of the backbone consisting of an increase in gauche defects, which cannot be obtained by “brute force” MD because the trans–gauche transition is a rare event at room temperature. Associated with the backbone rearrangement, we observe a change in the structure of the water layers/tubes as measured by the size and number of bulk (four-fold coordinated water molecules) and surface-like water clusters. At equilibrium, the mean size of bulk-like water clusters is small, typically between 10 and 20 molecules, depending on the morphology. Larger clusters are also present in our samples, the largest being made of ∼350 molecules, but even the latter is too small for percolation. This suggests that the proton transport through each morphology might be a two-step process: Grotthuss-like within bulk-like water clusters and of a different type (e.g., diffusive or even transport across fluctuatively opening necks) between clusters.

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