Abstract

Pulsed field gradient (PFG) NMR at high field was utilized to directly observe a transition between two different diffusion regimes in a Nafion 117 membrane loaded with water and acetone. Although water self-diffusivity at small water loadings was observed to be diffusion time-independent in the limit of small and large diffusion times, it showed a significant decrease with increasing diffusion time at intermediate times corresponding to root mean square displacements on the order of several microns. Under our experimental conditions, no self-diffusivity dependence on diffusion time was found for water at large water loadings and for acetone at all studied acetone loadings. The diffusion time-dependent self-diffusivity at small water concentration is explained by the existence of finite domains of interconnected water channels with sizes in the range of several microns that form in Nafion in the presence of acetone. The domain sizes and permeance of transport barriers separating adjacent domains are estimated based on the measured PFG NMR data. At large water concentrations, the water channels form a fully interconnected network, resulting in time-independent self-diffusivity. The absence of such a percolation-like transition with increasing molecular concentration for acetone is attributed to a difference in the regions available for water and acetone diffusion in Nafion. The diffusion data are correlated with and supported by structural data obtained using small-angle X-ray and neutron scattering techniques. These techniques reveal distinct water channels with radial dimensions in the nanometer range increasing upon water addition, while acetone appears to be in an interfacial perfluoroether region, reducing the size of the radial channel dimension.

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