The present invention relates to solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs); more particularly, to composition and structure of the electrode elements of SOFCs; and most particularly, to an improved electrode structure and formulation that decreases resistance and increases power density, thereby improving performance.
Prior art planar SOFCs use a thin electrolyte, typically zirconia doped with yttria (YSZ), which is supported on an Ni-YSZ cermet acting as an anode. This composite is known as a “bilayer” over which a cathode electrode is deposited consisting of an ionic conducting layer and a porous catalyst, typically a mixed ionic and electronic conductor (MIEC). The cathode MIEC material is predominantly an electronic conductor with some ionic conductivity.
At the cathode, oxygen is reduced and the ionic species pass through the electrolyte membrane to the anode where a fuel, typically hydrogen, is oxidized to produce electric power. Resistance of the cathode, both ohmic and polarization, plays a major role in overall cell resistance and therefore can greatly affect electrochemical performance, thereby impacting power.
One known approach to decreasing the cathode resistance (polarization) is to add a doped (Sm, Gd, Nd, Y etc.) ceria-based ionic conducting phase in the MIEC material to obtain a dual-phase composite cathode. The addition of an ionic conducting phase (SDC, YDC, GDC, LSGM, etc.) in the cathode (LSCF, BSCF, LNF, LSM, etc.) improves oxygen diffusion rate and charge transfer of oxygen ions at the electrode/electrolyte interface.
The principle of electrode optimization, however, suggests to strengthen the ionic network by increasing the volume fraction of the ionic conducting phase while keeping the electronic network percolating between the current collector and the electrolyte; e.g., to move the minimum in ambipolar resistance to higher ionic concentrations. This is difficult, as the ionic phase is nearly insulating, and as its volume fraction increases the electronic conductivity drops by several orders of magnitude. In addition, the requirement of a certain amount of porosity in the mixed layer further limits the supply of electrons through the thickness of the layer as the supply of electrons depends on the electronic resistivity of the composite cathode material and its connectivity to the current collector and electrolyte.
What is needed in the art is a composite electrode consisting of a high fraction of ionic conducting phase with robust ionic and electronic paths efficiently supplying electrons and/or ions between the current collector and the electrolyte.
What is further needed in the art is a functional layer resistant to “poisons” to further promote favorable electrochemical reactions within the electrode.
It is a primary object of the present invention to significantly reduce resistance and thereby improve the power density (W/cm2), durability, and power output of an Ni-YSZ anode-supported SOFC under low levels of poison, such as sulfur, and certain fuel mixtures containing hydrocarbons.
Briefly described, lateral segmentation of the mixed layer on a cathode electrode allows a higher fraction of ionic phase in a mixed layer, resulting in improved microstructure that provides higher specific surface area for electrochemical reaction. This is accomplished by using an MIEC layer over the segmented layer that supplies electrons laterally and vertically through the thickness of the mixed layer. Adequate connectivity between cathode current collector and electrolyte for electrons is established through openings in the segmented layer, assuring efficient charge transfer and improved activity of the electrocatalyst in the porous cathode. Cell resistance is reduced and power output is improved. Further, the invention can efficiently incorporate a variety of functional layers on the anode electrode to improve protection from poisons and certain fuel mixtures that degrade cell performance, and can reduce stresses between fuel cell components while maintaining adequate connectivity with the anode current collector and electrolyte via an Ni-YSZ anode.
The present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. The exemplifications set out herein illustrates currently preferred embodiments of the invention, and such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
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The benefits can be demonstrated of the segmented mixed conducting layer arrangement 100 shown in
The microstructures of both layers 116 and 14 are controlled by including some pore formers in their compositions. The amount of pore former can be between about 0 wt % and about 100 wt % of the solid phase or even higher with 10-50 wt % preferred.
The constraint on the amount of pore former is the mechanical strength of the resulting films. Pore formers are materials such as carbon black, starch, graphite, and the like, non-soluble organics, and/or other appropriate materials that decompose to leave the desired porosity in the sintered layer. Similarly, the composition of MIEC material in layer 14, such as LSCF, can vary in terms of relative amounts of its constituents while maintaining a pervoskite structure. The LSCF material can be deficient in A-sites or even a mixture of the two-phase pervoskite structures. Other MIEC materials that are predominantly electronic conductors (barium-strontium-cobalt-iron oxide, lanthanum-nickel-iron oxide, lanthanum-strontium-cobalt oxide, lanthanum-strontium-iron oxide, lanthanum-strontium-manganese oxide etc. and their combinations) can also comprise layers 116 and 14. Finally, low sintering temperatures between about 950° C. and about 1100° C. are preferred to avoid the formation of resistive phases at the electrode/electrolyte surface, to maximize the population of active sites, to minimize grain growth, and to maintain high catalytic activity. The sintering time at the temperature, thus, can vary from about 10 hours to about 0.5 hours.
Four 1″ diameter cells (two tests and two controls), each with 2.5 cm2 active area as described in Table 1 below, were prepared to demonstrate the performance improvements due to the segmented mixed (LSCF+SDCF) layer structure (
These cells were built on an 11-micron YSZ electrolyte 20 supported on a 0.45 mm Ni/YSZ substrate 12 acting as an anode. All the layers were screen printed using pastes obtained by mixing ˜60 wt % of solid phases with an organic binder.
First, the electrolyte surfaces of these cells were covered with ionic layer 18 comprising Sm0.2Ce0.8O2 with 2 wt % Fe2O3. The thickness after sintering at 1200° C. for 2 hours was 4-5 μm.
Next, segmented mixed layer 116 and continuous LSCF layer 14 were screen printed to produce cathodes with active areas of 2.5 cm2. The thickness of the layer 116 was about one half of layer 14 (20-30) μm. The total thickness of the cathode including layer 18 after sintering at ˜1050° C. was ˜40 μm. The details of the cell fabrication are summarized in Table 1. Silver and nickel meshes with platinum lead wires and pastes were used to establish the current collectors. The air and fuel sides of the cells were isolated using a glass sealing material. The NiO/YSZ composite anode was reduced, in situ, at 800° C. for 1 hour in a hydrogen gas atmosphere (50% H2 in N2).
The cathode side of the cell was exposed to flowing air at a rate of 2.3 L/min and the anode side was exposed to a flowing stream of 50% hydrogen at a rate of 2.3 L/min. The electrochemical measurements were conducted at 750° C. using a potentiostat/galvanostat (Parstat® 2273) and power-generating characteristics as a function of time were measured at a polarization potential of 0.7V.
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In summary, an SOFC segmented electrode in accordance with the present invention provides at least the following benefits:
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While the invention has been described by reference to various specific embodiments, it should be understood that numerous changes may be made within the spirit and scope of the inventive concepts described. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the described embodiments, but will have full scope defined by the language of the following claims.
The present invention was supported in part by a US Government Contract, No. DE-FC26-02NT41246. The United States Government may have rights in the present invention.