Constructing Fast Transmembrane Pathways in a Layered Double Hydroxide Nanosheets/Nanoparticles Composite Film for an Inorganic Anion-Exchange Membrane.
Fang XianLulu JiaYoshiyuki SugaharaHairong XueYamauchi YusukeTakayoshi SasakiRenzhi MaPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Anion-exchange membranes (AEMs) with high conductivity are crucial for realizing next-generation energy storage and conversion systems in an alkaline environment, promising a huge advantage in cost reduction without using precious platinum group metal catalysts. Layered double hydroxide (LDH) nanosheets, exhibiting a remarkably high hydroxide ion (OH - ) conductivity approaching 10 -1 S cm -1 along the in-plane direction, may be regarded as an ideal candidate material for the fabrication of inorganic solid AEMs. However, two-dimensional anisotropy results in a substantially low conductivity of 10 -6 S cm -1 along the cross-plane direction, which poses a hurdle to achieve fast ion conduction across the membrane comprising restacked nanosheets. In the present work, a composite membrane was prepared based on mixing/assembling micron-sized LDH nanosheets with nanosized LDH platelets (nanoparticles) via a facile vacuum filtration process. The hybridization with nanoparticles could alter the orientation of LDH nanosheets and reduce the restacking order, forming diversified fast ion-conducting pathways and networks in the composite membrane. As a result, the transmembrane conductivity significantly improved up to 1000-fold higher than that composed of restacked nanosheets only, achieving a high conductivity of 10 -2 to 10 -1 S cm -1 in both in-plane and cross-plane directions.