Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1294049 | Journal of Power Sources | 2009 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Single-chamber solid oxide fuel cells with coplanar microelectrodes were operated in methane-air mixtures (Rmix = 2) at 700 °C. The performance of cells with one pair of NiO-YSZ (yttria stabilized zirconia) anode and (La0.8Sr0.2)0.98MnO3-YSZ cathode, arranged parallel on a YSZ electrolyte substrate, was found to be significantly dependent on the electrode width. For an interelectrode gap of â¼250 μm, cells with average electrode widths exceeding â¼850 μm could establish a stable open circuit voltage (OCV) of â¼0.8 V, while those with widths less than â¼550 μm could not establish any OCV. In the intermediate range, the cells exhibited significant fluctuations in voltage and power under our testing conditions. This behavior suggests that a lower limit to electrode dimensions exists for cells with single electrode pairs, below which neither a stable difference in oxygen partial pressure, nor an OCV, can be established. Conversely, increasing the electrode width imposes a penalty in the form of an increase in the cell resistance. However, both size limits can be circumvented by employing multiple pairs of microscale electrodes in an interdigitated configuration.
Related Topics
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Authors
Melanie Kuhn, Teko W. Napporn, Michel Meunier, Srikar Vengallatore, Daniel Therriault,