Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6610581 | Electrochimica Acta | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Steam electrolysis over 11000 h1 with an electrolyte-supported solid oxide cell is discussed. The cell of 45 cm2 area consists of a scandia/ceria doped zirconia electrolyte (6Sc1CeSZ), CGO diffusion-barrier/adhesion layers, a lanthanum strontium cobaltite ferrite (LSCF) oxygen electrode, and a nickel steam/hydrogen electrode. After initial 2500 h operation with lower current-density magnitude, the current density was set to j = -0.9 A cmâ2 and the steam conversion rate to 51%. This led to a cell voltage of 1.185 V at 847 °C cell temperature. Average voltage degradation was 7.3 mV/1000 h (<0.6%/1000 h), the increase in the area specific resistance was 8 mΩ cm2/1000 h, sufficiently low for application in practical electrolysers. The electrical-to-chemical energy-conversion efficiency was ηel > 100% throughout the test (with an external heat source for evaporation). Impedance spectroscopic measurements revealed a degradation almost entirely due to increasing ohmic resistance. The rate of resistance increase was initially faster (up to 40 mΩ cm2/1000 h) and stabilised after several 1000 h operation. After 9000 h a small (non-ohmic) electrode degradation became detectable (<2 mV/1000 h), superimposed to ohmic degradation. The small electrode degradation is understood as indication for largely reversible (electrolysis cell/fuel cell) behaviour.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
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Authors
Josef Schefold, Annabelle Brisse, Hendrik Poepke,