Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7734358 | Journal of Power Sources | 2015 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
This study aims to enhance the direct carbon fuel cell (DCFC) efficiency by bubbling Ar gas in a carbon/carbonate slurry. The current discharge curve and CO and CO2 production rates were measured during discharge at 20 mA cmâ2. When carbon content in carbonates (WC/carbonate) was 1.0 wt%, Ar bubbling decreased the CO/CO2 production ratio from 0.16 to 0.051, and increased the CO2 production rate, which approached the theoretical value for complete electrochemical oxidation of carbon. Moreover, bubbling increased the cell voltage by about 0.1 V at steady state. At WC/carbonate = 3.0 wt%, the CO/CO2 production ratio without bubbling increased significantly to 8.5, indicating that partial electrochemical oxidation became dominant. The C/O2â ratio is key for explaining the electrochemical oxidation of the carbon. When the C/O2â ratio was low, such as at WC/carbonate = 1.0 wt%, complete electrochemical oxidation became dominant, and bubbling enhanced the complete electrochemical oxidation. When the C/O2â ratio was high, such as at WC/carbonate = 3.0 wt%, partial electrochemical oxidation became dominant, and bubbling did not inhibit it. For WC/carbonate = 1.0 wt%, bubbling increased both coulombic and voltage efficiencies, resulting in an increase in total efficiency from 52% to 64%.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Electrochemistry
Authors
Hirotatsu Watanabe, Tomoaki Furuyama, Ken Okazaki,