Polymer brush functionalized SiO 2 nanoparticle based Na ﬁ on nanocomposites: a novel avenue to low-humidity proton conducting membranes †

a Polyelectrolyte membranes showing proton conductivity at moderate levels of relative humidity and temperatures are essential for the development of polyelectrolyte membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs). Herein, monomethoxy oligoethylene glycol methacrylate derived polymer brush functionalized silica nano-particles (SiO 2 NPs) are presented as humidifying-nanoadditives for the fabrication of Na ﬁ on nanocompo-site membranes, exhibiting improved proton conductivities at moderate levels of relative humidity and temperatures. Polymer brush functionalized SiO 2 NPs (SiO 2 -polymer-brush), fabricated via surface initiated atom transfer radical polymerization (SI-ATRP), are dispersed in the Na ﬁ on resin solution, and nanocomposite membranes (Na ﬁ on/SiO 2 -polymer-brush) are fabricated via solution casting. For comparison, composite membranes of Na ﬁ on are also prepared with bare SiO 2 NPs. Spectroscopic measurements con ﬁ rm the presence of polymer brushes in the ﬁ nal membranes and demonstrate increased water uptake in membranes with polymer brush-functionalized nanocomposite membranes. Electro-chemical impedance analyses reveal that 1 wt% of functionalized SiO 2 NPs is su ﬃ cient to achieve Na ﬁ on nanocomposite membranes with superior proton conductivities at ambient and moderately high temperatures over the entire range of relative humidity (RH). This study presents a facile avenue to membranes with superior proton conductivities under moderate levels of RH and temperature, and provides important insights into the scope of nanocomposite PEMs for fuel cell applications.


Introduction
Gradual depletion of natural energy resources necessitates the development of more sustainable and reliable energy conversion systems.Among the available alternative energy production technologies, fuel cells are recognized as environmentally benign, single step energy conversion systems. 1,2][5][6] Polyelectrolyte membranes (PEMs) are considered as the electrochemical hearts of the PEMFCs. 7Due to their high proton conductivities, Nafion based polymer membranes constituted by perfluorosulfonated backbones and pendant protogenic sulfonic acid moieties are considered as the gold standard for PEMFCs. 8Nafion conducts protons only under high relative humidity (RH) conditions and becomes essentially an insulator for protons in the dry state. 9,107][18][19] The required RH level in an operating PEMFC is maintained by an external humidification system, which has implications for PEMFC efficiency and cost due to the additional space and heat requirements. 202][23][24] Among the different strategies adopted to achieve high proton conductivity at low RH levels, incorporation of nano and micro scale hydrophilic or hygroscopic additives into the PEMs has shown promising results.][37][38] Polyethylene glycol (PEG) based materials are also known for their hydrophilic and hygroscopic nature, and surface grafted PEG results in the formation of a water shell on material surfaces, making them resistant against biofouling.4][45] Inspired by these characteristics of PEG, and based on our previous findings, we anticipate that the incorporation of the hydrophilic and moisture retaining ethylene oxide moiety functionalized NP based additives would enhance the water retaining tendency and proton conductivity of PEMs at low RH.To prove this hypothesis, we present silica NPs functionalized with monomethoxy oligoethylene glycol methacrylate based polymer brushes as humidifying additives for enhancing the proton conductivity of the Nafion at moderate RH levels and temperatures.The choice of Nafion as PEM is based on the fact that despite extensive efforts employed in the search for alternative PEMs, Nafion still remains the PEM of choice for PEMFCs.Furthermore, the flexible nature of the Nafion membrane is also important for the mechanical stability of the active layer in a fuel cell assembly.The choice of polymer brush based additives is unique to our platform, which makes our strategy more resourceful when compared to the already explored PEMs.The nanocomposite membranes prepared by incorporating different percentages of polymer brush-functionalized silica NPs exhibited superior proton conductivities when compared to the reference pristine Nafion and Nafion nanocomposite membranes fabricated with silica NPs lacking the polymer brushes.The improvement in proton conductivity is particu-larly striking at moderate RH levels and temperatures.In the context of PEMFCs, this study highlights the potential of incorporating polymer brush-functionalized nanoparticles into standard Nafion materials to increase PEM performance.

Preparation of APTES functionalized silica particles (SiO 2 -NH 2 )
Amine functionalized silica NPs were prepared by a previously reported method. 46Briefly, TEOS (3.8 mL, 17 mmol) was added to a mixture of aqueous ammonium hydroxide solution (35%, 5.7 mL) and distilled ethanol (114 mL) and stirred overnight at room temperature.APTES (2.1 mL, 9.4 mmol) was added to the above solution and further stirred overnight at room temperature.Finally the particles were separated by centrifugation at 4000 rpm for 20 min, followed by washing three times with ethanol.

Immobilization of ATRP initiator (SiO 2 -Br)
The ATRP initiator was immobilized by adapting a previously described method. 37Briefly, degassed solution of TEA (200 µL, 1.2 mmol) and α-bromoisobutyryl bromide (150 µL, 1.2 mmol) in DCM (15 mL) was injected over degassed nanoparticles (1 g) under an inert atmosphere and stirred at room temperature for 2.5 h.The particles were purified by centrifugation at 4000 rpm for 20 min, followed by redispersing twice each in ethanol and DCM.

Preparation of proton conducting membranes
Polymer-brush functionalized SiO 2 NPs (0.5, 1, 2, 4 wt%) were diluted with 1 mL, 30% water : ethanol solution and sonicated for 1 min, followed by gradual addition of Nafion solution while stirring.The suspension was further sonicated until clear uniform solution formation, followed by casting on glass Petri plates.The plates were placed under vacuum for 30 min at 90 °C and left under a constant flow of nitrogen for 24 h at 90 °C.The 110 µm (±15 µm) thick membranes were dried in a vacuum oven for 24 h at 50 °C, followed by leaching with water for 12 h.The membranes were dried at 50 °C for 48 h under vacuum and finally treated with 0.1 M HCl for 3 h.For comparison, Nafion reference membranes and Nafion composite membranes with pristine SiO 2 NPs were casted following the above described procedure.

Water uptake capacity
The water uptake capacity was determined by submerging membranes in deionized water for 8 h followed by drying at 50 °C under vacuum for 8 h.The difference in weight of wet and dry membranes was recorded and the water uptake capacity was determined by the following expression: 45 Water uptake capacity ¼

Methanol diffusion
For the study of methanol diffusion two 90°elbow shaped glass pipes (area A = 2.324 cm 2 ) were connected to form a U-shaped profile.The membrane was fixed between these tubes by screw clamps thus vertically separating the cell into two compartments.One reservoir ("s = supply side") was filled with V = 22.5 mL 3 molar methanol aqueous solution, the other reservoir ("d = diffusion side") was filled with the same volume of deionized water.Both compartments were constantly agitated with a magnetic stirrer.Repeatedly 0.6 mL samples were taken from both sides and investigated by 1 H-NMR studies to determine the methanol concentration c D (t ) and c S (t ) of the compartments as a function of time.The concentration was evaluated using the integral ratio of the methyl and water proton signals, including the contribution of the methanol hydroxyl group to the water signal.To check the reliability of this method a 0.03 molar methanol aqueous solution was investigated, the deviation between measured and calculated NMR-ratios being less than 1%.In our experiment neither supply concentrations nor volumes (V) were constant over the investigated period.However, by iteration both effects can be mathematically included.For a membrane with permeability P and thickness L the time dependent methanol concentrations can be calculated over the time interval between sampling (t i < t < t i+1 ): To account for a variation of the membrane thickness L over its area, the thickness was measured at 11 different positions and the effective thickness was calculated by averaging over the inverse thickness.Effective and mean thicknesses deviate by less than 2%.
The permeability P was determined by minimizing the sum of squared residuals using eqn (3).
For comparison with the literature, a commercial Nafion 117 sample was subject to the same testing.The measured permeabilities of Nafion 117 were in good accordance with literature reports. 47

Proton conductivity
The in-plane proton conductivity of the membranes was measured by impedance spectroscopy in a two-electrode geometry using an SI 1260 impedance/gain-phase analyzer and a Novocontrol broadband dielectric converter.Humidity and temperature were controlled by a climate chamber (Binder KBF 240).From the Cole-Cole and Bode plots, the specific conductivity of the membranes was evaluated.The reported proton conductivities are averaged from two independent proton conductivity measurements.

Characterization
FTIR spectra were recorded on an ATR-FTIR (Alpha Bruker, Germany) spectrometer, with 100 scans.X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) was carried out using a Thermo Scientific K-Alpha.The Mg Kα (1253.6 eV) X-ray source was operated at 300 W. A pass energy of 117.40 eV was used for the survey scans.The spectra were recorded using a 60°take off angle relative to the surface normal.Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images were obtained for silica nanoparticles by using an FEI Tecnai G2 F30 instrument.Samples were prepared by drop casting two to three drops of particle dispersions in ethanol onto a carbon coated copper TEM grid.To obtain a representative cross section of the hybrid membrane films, TEM samples were prepared using a cryo-Leica Ultra-microtome (EMUC6 + EMFC6) −100 °C.A 45 degree cryodiamond knife was used.The hybrid film approach step of the ultra-microtome was constant at 0.2 μm with a constant speed of 10 mm s −1 .During each cycle, samples with 30-50 nm thickness were obtained.The films were collected in a boat.The boat was filled up with a 2.3 M saccharose solution in order to prevent water from freezing.Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) imaging was carried out on a FEI Quanta 200 FEG SEM with 4 nm resolution.The electron acceleration voltage used was around 10 kV.Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) was performed on SDTQ600 (TA Instruments, United States) under air atmosphere.
Optical microscopy was carried out using confocal laser scanning microscopy on a Leica TCP SP5.A stack of 318 images (168 nm per slice) was recorded in reflection mode using 458 nm excitation.The images were deconvoluted and visualized in isosurface mode with Huygens Software.
For coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) spectroscopy, dry membranes were washed with MilliQ water (18.2MΩ) in an ultrasonic bath.Spectra from fully hydrated membranes were obtained by immersing the sonicated membranes in MilliQ water for at least one week.For dried membranes, the hydrated membranes were left to dry in a standard laboratory ambient environment for three days after which spectra were recorded.All samples were sandwiched between standard glass coverslips and glass slides for CARS acquisition.A dual-output laser source (Leukos-CARS, Leukos, Limoges, France) provides the pump and Stokes beams.The pump is a passively Q-switched 1064 nm microchip laser, with less than 1 ns pulses at a 32 kHz repetition rate.The Stokes beam is provided by a supercontinuum fibre with a bandwidth from 1.1 µm to 1.9 µm.The Stokes and pump beams are polarization matched, overlapped at a dichroic mirror (LP02-1064RU-25, Semrock), and introduced into a modified inverted microscope (Eclipse Ti-U, Nikon).The beams are focused onto the sample by an objective (LCPlan N, 100×/0.85IR, Olympus), and the forward CARS signal is collected with a 10× magnification, 0.25 NA air objective (Newport).The full power of both the pump/probe (30 mW) and Stokes (30 mW) beams was used in these experiments.
The samples were raster scanned across the focal volume with x-y steps of 0.5 × 0.5 µm in plane with piezo driven stages (Nano-PDQ 375 HS, Mad City Labs), and a full CARS spectrum was obtained at each location ( pixel) with an acquisition time of 100 ms on a CCD (Newton DU920P-BR-DD, Andor).For each sample, 101 × 101 spatial pixels were scanned.The CARS data are acquired in custom software written in LabView (National Instruments) and saved for offline processing with Igor Pro (Wavemetrics).
Each raw CARS spectrum was converted into a Raman-like spectrum using a modified Kramers-Kronig phase-retrieval transform, with the CARS spectrum from glass serving as the non-resonant background. 48After transformation, a 5 th order polynomial was used to fit a slowly varying error phase to regions of the spectra without resonances.This fit was subtracted from the transformed data, which yielded the final resonantly retrieved CARS (Raman-like) data presented here.For all data shown here, the fingerprint (500 to 1800 cm −1 ) and water (1900 to 4000 cm −1 ) regions of the spectra are processed independently.This was done to minimize the error phase from the transformed CARS spectra.Finally, the processed CARS spectra shown here were averaged from 49 spatial pixels.
The attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopic analysis revealed an absorption band at 1724 cm −1 only for the poly(MeOEGMA) brush functionalized SiO 2 NPs (SiO 2 -polymer-brush), which corresponds to the CvO stretching vibration of the pendant ester linkages present in the poly(MeOEGMA) brush (Fig. 1a).The absorption band corresponding to the stretching vibration of the aliphatic C-H bond around 2800-2900 cm −1 was clearly evident in the case of polymer-brush functionalized SiO 2 NPs, which reflects the incorporation of a higher C-H content at the surface as a Scheme 1 Schematic illustration of the reaction pathway employed for the synthesis and polymer brush functionalization of the silica NPs.The imaging of SiO 2 -NH 2 NPs using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) revealed spherical NPs with an average diameter of ∼250 nm (Fig. 2a and b).Compared to the SiO 2 -NH 2 NPs (Fig. 2c), the high resolution TEM (HRTEM) images of polymer brush functionalized SiO 2 NPs revealed a homogeneous lower contrast layer covering the SiO 2 NP surface, presumably due to poly(MeOEGMA) (Fig. 2d).The poly(MeOEGMA) brush functionalized SiO 2 NPs 1 wt% were then dispersed in a commercially available Nafion resin solution (20 wt% in lower aliphatic alcohols and water), which was solution casted in glass Petri plates under an inert atmosphere at 90 °C to give nanocomposite membranes.For the sake of comparison, nanocomposite membranes without NPs and with pristine SiO 2 NPs were also fabricated under the identical conditions.Microtome TEM images of the resulting nanocomposite membranes revealed that the NPs homogeneously dispersed in the membrane (Fig. 2f-h).In the case of the polymer-brush functionalized silica NP based Nafion nanocomposite membrane, the uniform polymer brush layer covering the surface of NPs can be observed (Fig. 2h).
The distribution of SiO 2 -polymer-brush NPs in the Nafion membrane was further investigated by confocal laser scanning microscopy (refer to the video provided as a part of the ESI †).The NPs reflect incoming light due to the difference of the refractive index with respect to the embedding medium.To confirm the assignment of the reflected signal to NPs, the corresponding Nafion reference film was investigated at the same, and with even more sensitive settings, which did not show any scattering objects.The elongation of the spherical NPs in the axial direction is an artifact of the anisotropic resolution of confocal microscopes.
Fabricated membranes were further investigated by coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) spectroscopy.CARS spectra of the Nafion reference, Nafion/SiO 2 , and Nafion/SiO 2polymer-brush (1 wt%) membranes were taken under both dry and fully hydrated conditions.Fig. 3a shows processed CARS (Raman-like) spectra after drying the membranes under ambient conditions for three days, which have all been normalized to the CF 2 vibration band at 735 cm −1 .The CH-region of the vibrational spectrum (2800 to 3100 cm −1 ) of the Nafion/ SiO 2 -polymer-brush samples shows a significant increase in band intensity compared to the Nafion and Nafion/SiO 2 reference spectra.The additional Raman band intensity corresponds to the CH 2 asymmetric (2943 cm −1 ) and CH 3 asymmetric (2980 cm −1 ) modes, presumably from the polymer brush layer.For the fully hydrated membranes (Fig. 3b), the CH resonances of the polymer brush, despite being partly obscured by strong water resonances, are visible and confirm the presence of the polymer-brush layer upon SiO 2 -polymerbrush nanoparticle incorporation into the Nafion membrane.
The Raman-like spectra allow direct quantification of the relative amount of absorbed water per CF 2 group by integration of water band intensity (3060-3900 cm −1 ), I H 2 O .Spectral analysis shows that the nanoparticle-modified membranes retain higher amounts of water after three days of ambient drying  relative to pristine Nafion (R = I H 2 O,X /I H 2 O,Nafion ), where X is (Nafion/SiO 2 ) or (Nafion/SiO 2 -polymer-brush).For (Nafion/ SiO 2 ) and (Nafion/SiO 2 -polymer-brush), R = 1 and 1.45, respectively.Under fully hydrated conditions, the Nafion/SiO 2polymer-brush membrane also shows the strongest water absorption, (R = 1.56) compared to Nafion/SiO 2 (R = 1.36), which is consistent with the hygroscopic character of oligomeric ethylene glycol pendant groups.The processed CARS spectra provide direct spectroscopic evidence that the water absorption and retention abilities of the tested membranes decrease in the following order: Nafion/SiO 2 -polymer brush > Nafion/SiO 2 > Nafion.

Evaluation of the proton conducting ability of nanocomposite membranes
The nanocomposite PEMs were solution casted by dispersing different amounts (wt%) of pristine SiO 2 NPs, and SiO 2polymer-brush NPs in commercial 20 wt% Nafion resin solution (available acid capacity = meq.g −1 ≥ 1.00, total acid capacity = 1.03-1.12meq.).The dry state thickness of the resulting membranes was around 110 µm (±15 µm).The fabricated membranes were thermally stable (Fig. S6 †) as determined by the thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and did not show any sign of brittleness (Fig. S7 †).A detailed proton conductivity study was carried out on the nanocomposite membranes containing 0.5 to 4 wt% of NPs, and a considerable increase in proton conductivity was observed for the nanocomposite membranes containing SiO 2 -polymer brush NPs (ESI, Table S1, and Fig. S1-S3 †).Just 1 wt% of the NPs was sufficient to achieve the highest proton conductivity, while a further increase in the NP content resulted in decreased proton conductivity.At ambient temperature (25 °C) and at a moderately high temperature (55 °C), the nanocomposite membranes with 1 wt% of SiO 2 -polymer-brush NPs (Nafion/ SiO 2 -polymer-brush-1%) exhibited proton conductivity remarkably higher than the Nafion reference sample over the entire range of RH (Fig. 4).At 25 °C and 20% RH the Nafion/SiO 2polymer-brush-1% showed a proton conductivity of 3.4 mS cm −1 that is ∼11 times higher than the proton conductivity of the Nafion membrane (0.3 mS cm −1 ) under identical conditions.At 25 °C, the proton conductivities of all the membranes increased with the increase in RH, and at 80% RH the Nafion/SiO 2 -polymer-brush-1% nanocomposite membrane exhibited ∼4 times higher proton conductivity (95.4 mS cm −1 ) than the proton conductivity of the Nafion membrane (24.5 mS cm −1 ).The superior proton conducting characteristics of the Nafion/SiO 2 -polymer-brush-1% nanocomposite membrane were also maintained at the moderately high temperature of 55 °C.The proton conductivity of the Nafion/SiO 2polymer-brush-1% nanocomposite membrane (9.03mS cm −1 ) was ∼5.7 times higher than the proton conductivity of Nafion (1.59 mS cm −1 ) at 55 °C and 20% RH.The proton conductivity of the Nafion/SiO 2 -polymer-brush-1% nanocomposite membrane reached a maximum value of 157.2 mS cm −1 at 55 °C and 80% RH, which is ∼3 times higher than the proton conductivity of Nafion (52.9 mS cm −1 ) under identical conditions.Nafion/SiO 2 -polymer-brush nanocomposite membranes also showed superior proton conductivity characteristics when compared to the Nafion/SiO 2 membranes containing identical wt% of NP additives.At lower temperatures the proton conductivity profiles were comparable, however a particularly striking difference was observed at moderately high temperatures.For instance at 55 °C, the proton conductivity of the Nafion/SiO 2polymer-brush-1% nanocomposite membrane was ∼4 (at 20% RH) and ∼1.2 (at 80% RH) times higher than the proton conductivities of Nafion/SiO 2 nanocomposite membranes.This highlights the proton conductivity enhancing influence of the poly(MeOEGMA) polymer brush.To assess the stability of the equilibrium proton conductivity, the conductivities of Nafion and Nafion/SiO 2 -polymer-brush 1% were monitored as a function of time at a constant 5% RH and 55 °C (Fig. S4 †).Fitting and extrapolation were done with a logarithmic function.There is no boundary value for a log function, so the value after 20 h was taken as the equilibrium value.Waiting much longer would not significantly change the conductivity.Furthermore, proton conductivities measured as a function of increasing and decreasing RH values resulted in a very small hysteresis (Fig. S5 †).These studies reveal that the proton conducting characteristics of the membranes are fairly stable.The activation energy data are also provided in the ESI (Table S2 †).
The superior proton conducting characteristics of the Nafion/SiO 2 -polymer-brush nanocomposite membrane in comparison with Nafion over the entire RH range stem from the higher water uptake tendency of poly(MeOEGMA).The Nafion exhibited a water uptake of ∼12%, whereas the water uptake for the Nafion/SiO 2 -polymer-brush nanocomposite membrane containing 1 wt% of particles was found to be around 18%.The water uptake for the nanocomposite membranes containing 1 wt% of bare SiO 2 NPs was around 14%.These results are quantitatively similar to those obtained from the CARS measurements, confirming the relatively increased water uptake in polymer-brush functionalized composite membranes compared to pristine Nafion.
In order to assess the effect of nanoparticle additives on the methanol diffusion across the Nafion membrane, we also evaluated the methanol permeability of our nanocomposite membranes.The methanol permeability of the Nafion/SiO 2polymer-brush 1% nanocomposite (2.25 × 10 −6 cm 2 s −1 ) was comparable to Nafion 117 (2.09 × 10 −6 cm 2 s −1 ) (Fig. 5), which suggests that the polymer-brush grafted SiO 2 NPs increase the proton conductivity of Nafion without affecting its methanol permeability.

Conclusions
A facile avenue to high proton conducting membranes under moderate levels of RH and temperature is presented.The oligoethylene glycol moieties were demonstrated to improve the proton conductivity of Nafion at moderate levels of RH and temperatures.Poly(MeOEGMA) polymer brush-functionalized SiO 2 NPs fabricated via SI-ATRP were employed as conductivity enhancing additives.The nanocomposite membranes were prepared by a simple solution casting method.The proton conductivity studies showed that 1 wt% of the poly(MeOEGMA) polymer brush-functionalized SiO 2 NP additive was enough to improve the proton conducting characteristics of Nafion.The nanocomposite Nafion membrane with 1 wt% of polymer brush-functionalized SiO 2 NP additive showed ∼11 times higher proton conductivity at 20% RH and 25 °C, whereas at the same temperature and 80% RH, the proton conductivity of the nanocomposite membrane was ∼4 times higher than that of Nafion.The proton conductivities of all the membranes increased with an increase in temperature while the proton conductivity of nanocomposite membranes derived from polymer brush functionalized SiO 2 NPs was always superior to that of Nafion.At 55 °C and 20% RH, the proton conductivity of the polymer brush-functionalized SiO 2 NP derived Nafion nanocomposite membrane was ∼5.7 times higher than that of Nafion.At this higher temperature and under 80% RH, the nanocomposite membrane showed ∼3 times higher proton conductivity than Nafion.When compared to the Nafion nanocomposite membranes fabricated by using bare SiO 2 NPs as additives, striking differences were observed at moderately higher temperature (55 °C), where nanocomposite membranes derived from polymer brush functionalized SiO 2 NPs exhibited ∼4 (at 20% RH) and ∼1.2 (at 80% RH) times higher proton conductivity.The presented results are of significant relevance for the development of Nafion based nanocomposite membranes with high proton conductivities at moderate levels of RH and temperatures.
result of poly(MeOEGMA) brush functionalization.The characteristic absorption band for Si-O-Si stretching vibration (1046 cm −1 ) was also evident in the FTIR spectrum of the SiO 2polymer-brush.All the surface chemical modifications as depicted in Scheme 1 were further ascertained by XPS.The signals for the Si 2p orbital at 100 eV and Si 2s orbital at 154 eV originating from the silica contents of the NPs were clearly observable in the survey scan of the SiO 2 -NH 2 NPs (Fig. 1b).The signals at 400 eV and 285 eV corresponding to the N 1s and C 1s orbitals validated the functionalization of SiO 2 NPs with APTES.The subsequent immobilization of the ATRP initiator was ascertained by the signals at 70 eV for Br 3d orbitals and 185 eV for Br 3p orbitals.The effective growth of the poly(MeOEGMA) brush from the surface of SiO 2 -Br via SI-ATRP resulted in the masking of nitrogen and bromine signals (Fig. 1c).The polymer brush functionalization of SiO 2 NPs was further confirmed by the fact that the O/C ratio (0.425) deduced from the XPS derived surface element composition of the SiO 2 -polymer-brush was in good agreement with the theoretical O/C (0.428) ratio for poly-(MeOEGMA).Furthermore, the high resolution C 1s scan of the SiO 2 -polymer-brush NPs could be the curve fit for the ester (O-CvO, 288.4 eV), ether (C-O-C, 285.9 eV) and aliphatic (C-H and C-C, 284.3 eV) carbon constituents of the poly(MeOEGMA) brush (Fig. 1d).These characterization methods established the successful fabrication of poly(MeOEGMA) brush functionalized SiO 2 NPs.

Fig. 3
Fig. 3 Processed CARS spectra of Nafion reference and Nafion nanocomposite membranes in dry (a) and fully hydrated states (b).In order to compare different spectra, each spectrum is normalized by the corresponding intensity of the CF 2 vibration at 735 cm −1 .