Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7726002 | Journal of Power Sources | 2018 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Cr-poisoning of the cathodes due to the presence of metallic interconnects is detrimental to the performance of intermediate temperature solid oxide fuel cell stacks. Applying a protective coating on the interconnect is an effective solution to preventing Cr-poisoning. In this study, the application of a protective CuMn1.8O4 spinel coating is explored. Dense coatings are deposited on both metallic flat plates and meshes by electrophoretic deposition followed by thermal densification steps. The coating is found to be a mixture of Mn3O4 and cubic spinel phases at room temperature but is a pure cubic spinel phase between 750â¯Â°C and 850â¯Â°C. A reaction layer between the Cr2O3 scale at the coating/interconnect interface and CuMn1.8O4 coating is found to be a mixture of (Cu,Mn,Cr)3-xO4 cubic spinel phases with Cr-rich precipitates believed to be Cr2O3, indicating that the coating layer acts as a Cr getter. Solubility experiments show that 1â¯mol of the CuMn1.8O4 phase can getter at least 1.83â¯mol of Cr2O3 at 800â¯Â°C. Electrochemical testing of cells in the presence of coated interconnects show that the CuMn1.8O4 coating getters Cr effectively for 12 days at 800â¯Â°C, leading to no performance loss of the cell due to Cr-poisoning.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Electrochemistry
Authors
Zhihao Sun, Ruofan Wang, Alexey Y. Nikiforov, Srikanth Gopalan, Uday B. Pal, Soumendra N. Basu,