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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(40): 47049-47057, 2023 Oct 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37751482

ABSTRACT

Increasing carbon emissions have accelerated climate change, resulting in devastating effects that are now tangible on an everyday basis. This is mirrored by a projected increase in global energy demand of approximately 50% within a single generation, urging a shift from fossil-fuel-derived materials toward greener materials and more sustainable manufacturing processes. Biobased industrial byproducts, such as side streams from the food industry, are attractive alternatives with strong potential for valorization due to their large volume, low cost, renewability, biodegradability, and intrinsic material properties. Here, we demonstrate the reutilization of industrial chicken feather waste into proton-conductive membranes for fuel cells, protonic transistors, and water-splitting devices. Keratin was isolated from chicken feathers via a fast and economical process, converted into amyloid fibrils through heat treatment, and further processed into membranes with an imparted proton conductivity of 6.3 mS cm-1 using a simple oxidative method. The functionality of the membranes is demonstrated by assembling them into a hydrogen fuel cell capable of generating 25 mW cm-2 of power density to operate various types of devices using hydrogen and air as fuel. Additionally, these membranes were used to generate hydrogen through water splitting and in protonic field-effect transistors as thin-film modulators of protonic conductivity via the electrostatic gating effect. We believe that by converting industrial waste into renewable energy materials at low cost and high scalability, our green manufacturing process can contribute to a fully circular economy with a neutral carbon footprint.

2.
ChemSusChem ; 16(21): e202300775, 2023 Nov 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37551734

ABSTRACT

The use of hydrocarbon-based proton conducting membranes in fuel cells is currently hampered by the insufficient durability of the material in the device. Membrane aging is triggered by the presence of reactive intermediates, such as HO⋅, which attack the polymer and eventually lead to chain breakdown and membrane failure. An adequate antioxidant strategy tailored towards hydrocarbon-based ionomers is therefore imperative to improve membrane lifetime. In this work, we perform studies on reaction kinetics using pulse radiolysis and γ-radiolysis as well as fuel cell experiments to demonstrate the feasibility of increasing the stability of hydrocarbon-based membranes against oxidative attack by implementing a Nature-inspired antioxidant strategy. We found that metalated-porphyrins are suitable for damage transfer and can be used in the fuel cell membrane to reduce membrane aging with a low impact on fuel cell performance.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(2): 895-901, 2022 Jan 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34909811

ABSTRACT

Highly reactive aromatic cation radicals have been invoked lately in synthetic routes and in the degradation pathways of hydrocarbon-based polymers. Changes in the electron density of aromatic compounds are expected to alter the reaction pathway following one electron oxidation through altering the pKa of the formed intermediate cation radical. Electron-donating groups increase its stability, however, little experimental data are known. While, in theory, the cation radical can be repaired by simple electron transfer, electron transfer to or from its deprotonated form, the hydroxycyclohexadienyl radical, will cause permanent modification or degradation. Time-resolved absorption spectroscopy indicates a pKa ≈ 2-3 for the 4-(tert-butyl)-2-methoxyphenylsulfonate (BMPS) radical cation, while its parent compound 4-(tert-butyl) phenylsulfonate (BPS) is much more acidic. The stability of both compounds towards oxidation by HO˙ was evaluated under air at pH 5 and pH 0. At pH 5, both BMPS and BPS are unstable, and superstoichiometric degradation was observed. Degradation was slightly reduced for BPS at pH 0. In contrast, the more electron rich BMPS showed 80% lower degradation. We unambigously showed that in the presence of Ce(III) and H2O2 at pH 0 both BMPS and BPS could be catalytically repaired via one electron reduction, resulting in further damage moderation.

4.
Soft Matter ; 15(42): 8512-8524, 2019 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31633148

ABSTRACT

The self-assembly of small colloidal clusters, so-called colloidal molecules, into crystalline materials has proven extremely challenging, the outcome often being glassy, amorphous states where positions and orientations are locked. In this paper, a new type of colloidal molecule is therefore prepared, assembled from poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM)-based microgels that due to their well documented softness and temperature-response allow for greater defect tolerance compared to hard spheres and for convenient in situ tuning of size, volume fraction and inter-particle interactions with temperature. The microgels (B) are assembled by electrostatic adsorption onto oppositely charged, smaller-sized microgels (A), where the relative size of the two determines the valency (n) of the resulting core-satellite ABn-type colloidal molecules. Following assembly, a microfluidic deterministic lateral displacement (DLD) device is used to effectively isolate AB4-type colloidal molecules of tetrahedral geometry that possess a repulsive-to-attractive transition on crossing the microgels' volume phase transition temperature (VPTT). These soft, temperature-responsive colloidal molecules constitute highly promising building blocks for the preparation of new materials with emergent properties, and their optical wavelength-size makes them especially interesting for optical applications.

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