Characterization of Commercial Proton Exchange Membrane Materials after Exposure to Beta and Gamma Radiation
Autor: | H. Li, C. Muirhead, R. Carson, S. N. Thomson, S. Suppiah, A. Ratnayake, J. Robinson, I. Castillo, H. Boniface |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Nuclear and High Energy Physics
Electrolysis Materials science Tritiated water Mechanical Engineering Radiochemistry Proton exchange membrane fuel cell law.invention chemistry.chemical_compound Membrane Nuclear magnetic resonance Nuclear Energy and Engineering chemistry law Nafion Ultimate tensile strength General Materials Science Elongation Cobalt-60 Civil and Structural Engineering |
Zdroj: | Fusion Science and Technology. 67:443-446 |
ISSN: | 1943-7641 1536-1055 |
DOI: | 10.13182/fst14-t50 |
Popis: | Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) type electrolysis cells have a potential use for tritium removal and heavy water upgrading. AECL is currently exposing various commercial PEM materials to both gamma (Cobalt-60 source) and beta (tritiated water) radiation to study the effects of radiation on these materials. This paper summarizes the testing methods and results that have been collected to date. The PEM materials that are or have been exposed to radiation are: Nafion 112, 212, 117 and 1110. Membrane characterization pre- and post- exposure consists of non-destructive inspection (FTIR, SEM/XPS), mechanical (tensile strength, percentage elongation, and modulus), electrical (resistance), or chemical (ion-exchange capacity - IEC). It has appeared that the best characterization techniques to compare exposed versus unexposed membranes were IEC, ultimate tensile strength and percent elongation. These testing techniques are easy and cheap to perform. The non-destructive tests, such as SEM and FTIR did not provide particularly useful information on radiation-induced degradation. Where changes in material properties were measured after radiation exposure, they would be expected to result in poorer cell performance. However, for modest γ-radiation exposure, all membranes showed a slight decrease in cell voltage (better performance). In contrast, the one β-radiation exposed membrane did show the expected increasemore » in cell voltage. The counterintuitive trend for γ-radiation exposed membranes is not yet understood. Based on these preliminary results, it appears that γ- and β-radiation exposures have different effects.« less |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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