Using an oxide nanoarchitecture to make or break a proton wire

Anal Chem. 2005 Dec 15;77(24):7924-32. doi: 10.1021/ac051168b.

Abstract

We report that long-range proton diffusion (>0.3 mm) is generated in monolithic ultraporous manganese oxide nanoarchitectures upon exposure to gas-phase water. The sol-gel-derived ambigel nanoarchitectures, with bicontinuous networks of covalently bonded nanoscale solid and through-connected mesopores, exhibit conductometric sensitivity to humidity as established by impedance spectroscopy. The spectra contain a Warburg feature from which the concentration and diffusion length of the protonic charge carriers are determined. Water adsorbs conformally onto the architecture's continuous solid network in equilibrium with atmospheric humidity to create a continuous water sheath that acts as a 3-D proton wire. As a result, monolithic manganese oxide ambigels exhibit an equilibrium conductometric response to humidity that is 14 times greater than that of previous reports for electrolytic manganese oxide. A packed bed of 1-10-microm ambigel particulates in physical contact with one another, each with the same nanoscale morphology as the monolithic nanoarchitecture, also support long-range proton diffusion; however, the sensitivity to humidity is four times lower than the monolithic form due to restricted proton transport between adjacent particulates. Films composed of 0.3-12-microm ambigel particulates supported on interdigitated array electrodes with 20-microm electrode spacing express finite-diffusion behavior due to the short distance between the contact electrodes and have a conductometric sensitivity to humidity comparable to electrolytic MnO2 and 17 times lower than the monolithic ambigel. These results suggest that controlling the nature of the porous and solid phases in a nanoarchitecture provides a mechanism to limit interference from condensed water in conductometric gas-phase sensors. In addition, continuous monolithic architectures should improve electrochemical performance in devices where efficient long-range transport of protons or other ions is critical.