Opportunity
SAM #S-194655
Licensing Opportunity for PFAS-Free Sulfonated Poly(norbornene) Ionomeric Binders from Los Alamos National Laboratory
Buyer
DOE Senior Network Security Contractor
Posted
June 29, 2026
Respond By
January 07, 2027
Identifier
S-194655
NAICS
325211, 325199
Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), under the Department of Energy and Triad National Security, LLC, is offering a technology licensing opportunity for PFAS-Free Sulfonated Poly(norbornene) Ionomeric Binders. - Technology developed by LANL researchers; patent pending - Intended for use as electrode ionomers in proton-conducting devices (e.g., PEM fuel cells, water electrolyzers) - PFAS-free composition addresses environmental and regulatory concerns - Features strong proton conductivity, tunable hydrophobicity, and drop-in compatibility with conventional PFSA materials - Licensing available to existing and start-up companies - Agreements may be exclusive or non-exclusive - No external development services requested; focus is on commercial licensing and partnership - No specific OEMs or commercial vendors mentioned; technology is proprietary to LANL - No attachments or additional product/service line items provided
Description
A Cleaner, Tunable Alternative for Hydrogen Fuel Cells and Water Electrolyzers
Hydrogen energy systems depend on a small but critical polymer layer inside each electrode, called an ionomeric binder, that shuttles protons, manages water and lets reactant gases reach the catalyst. The industry has long relied on perfluorosulfonic acid (PFSA) materials for this role, which contain PFAS (per‑ and polyfluoroalkyl substances) — “forever chemicals” — now under increasing regulatory pressure. Researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory have developed a family of highly sulfonated poly(norbornene) ionomers that are entirely PFAS-free, deliver strong proton conductivity, do not poison precious-metal catalysts the way conventional aromatic alternatives do, and can be chemically tuned to keep electrodes dry under load. Together, these qualities position the material as a drop-in path forward for high-performance proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells and water electrolyzers in a tightening environmental landscape.
How it Works
PFAS-Free Sulfonated Poly(norbornene) Ionomeric Binders are a class of aliphatic sulfonated poly(norbornene) polymers designed specifically as electrode ionomers in proton-conducting devices. The polymer’s backbone is built from fused bicyclic norbornane units that lack the aromatic pi-electron systems found in conventional hydrocarbon ionomers. The absence of those electrons means the polymer does not strongly adsorb onto platinum catalyst surfaces, so catalytic activity is preserved. Sulfonic acid groups covalently attached onto this backbone supply the proton-conducting pathways, while the bulky bicyclic rings create extra free volume inside the polymer, allowing oxygen and hydrogen to diffuse more easily through the binder layer and reach the catalyst. By adjusting the ratio of sulfonated to non-sulfonated segments, the developers can dial in ionic activity and hydrophobicity to prevent electrode flooding, a persistent issue for PFAS-free ionomers when operated at high current density.
Technology Description
In a PEM fuel cell or water electrolyzer, the membrane electrode assembly (MEA) is the heart of the device, and the electrode ionomer inside it must simultaneously conduct protons, transport water, allow reactant gases to reach catalyst particles and bind mechanically to both the membrane and the catalyst layer. PFSA materials such as Nafion meet these requirements but carry the environmental burden associated with perfluorinated chemistries. Hydrocarbon-based sulfonated polymers offer a cleaner, lower-cost route, yet their phenyl-rich backbones tend to adsorb onto platinum and reduce catalytic activity, their gas permeability is typically low and the high sulfonic acid content needed for conductivity drives down hydrophobicity, leading to flooding under realistic operating conditions. PFAS-Free Sulfonated Poly(norbornene) Ionomeric Binders target each of these failure modes simultaneously by replacing the phenyl-heavy architecture with a sulfonated poly(norbornene) platform.
Advantages
Contains no PFAS, helping device makers stay ahead of tightening regulations on perfluorinated chemicals Maintains catalyst activity by avoiding the platinum-adsorbing phenyl groups common in other hydrocarbon ionomers Allows higher gas permeability for improved reactant transport at the electrode Offers tunable hydrophobicity to keep electrodes from flooding during demanding operation Built on a polymer platform with demonstrated thermal stability and mechanical durability Synthesized from lower-cost, structurally tunable starting materials compared with perfluorinated chemistries
Market Applications
Hydrogen Energy (PEM fuel cells, water electrolyzers, reversible fuel cells) Transportation (fuel cell vehicles, heavy-duty trucking, maritime auxiliary power) Stationary Power and Backup (data centers, telecom, distributed generation) Industrial Gas and Chemicals (hydrogen production for refining, ammonia, steel) Aerospace and Defense (unmanned systems, portable power packs)
TRL 4
U.S. Patent pending
LA-UR-26-25232
LANL Tech Partnerships: Unlock the Innovative Potential
Los Alamos National Laboratory offers a wide range of cutting-edge technologies and capabilities that may provide your company with a competitive edge in the market and unlock the innovative potential that can enhance, refine, and revolutionize your products.
LANL’s licensing program focuses on moving inventions developed by our researchers to commercial innovations. Patented and patent pending inventions and copyrighted software are available to existing and start-up companies through exclusive and non-exclusive licensing agreements. For specific discussions, please contact licensing@lanl.gov.
Note: This is not a call for external services for the development of this technology.
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