Cargando…

Testing the Chemical/Structural Stability of Proton Conducting Perovskite Ceramic Membranes by in Situ/ex Situ Autoclave Raman Microscopy

Ceramics, which exhibit high proton conductivity at moderate temperatures, are studied as electrolyte membranes or electrode components of fuel cells, electrolysers or CO(2) converters. In severe operating conditions (high gas pressure/high temperature), the chemical activity towards potentially rea...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Slodczyk, Aneta, Zaafrani, Oumaya, Sharp, Matthew D., Kilner, John A., Dabrowski, Bogdan, Lacroix, Olivier, Colomban, Philippe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4021956/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24957060
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes3040311
_version_ 1782316323387211776
author Slodczyk, Aneta
Zaafrani, Oumaya
Sharp, Matthew D.
Kilner, John A.
Dabrowski, Bogdan
Lacroix, Olivier
Colomban, Philippe
author_facet Slodczyk, Aneta
Zaafrani, Oumaya
Sharp, Matthew D.
Kilner, John A.
Dabrowski, Bogdan
Lacroix, Olivier
Colomban, Philippe
author_sort Slodczyk, Aneta
collection PubMed
description Ceramics, which exhibit high proton conductivity at moderate temperatures, are studied as electrolyte membranes or electrode components of fuel cells, electrolysers or CO(2) converters. In severe operating conditions (high gas pressure/high temperature), the chemical activity towards potentially reactive atmospheres (water, CO(2), etc.) is enhanced. This can lead to mechanical, chemical, and structural instability of the membranes and premature efficiency loss. Since the lifetime duration of a device determines its economical interest, stability/aging tests are essential. Consequently, we have developed autoclaves equipped with a sapphire window, allowing in situ Raman study in the 25–620 °C temperature region under 1–50 bar of water vapor/gas pressure, both with and without the application of an electric field. Taking examples of four widely investigated perovskites (BaZr(0.9)Yb(0.1)O(3−δ), SrZr(0.9)Yb(0.1)O(3−δ), BaZr(0.25)In(0.75)O(3−δ), BaCe(0.5)Zr(0.3)Y(0.16)Zn(0.04)O(3−δ)), we demonstrate the high potential of our unique set-up to discriminate between good/stable and instable electrolytes as well as the ability to detect and monitor in situ: (i) the sample surface reaction with surrounding atmospheres and the formation of crystalline or amorphous secondary phases (carbonates, hydroxides, hydrates, etc.); and (ii) the structural modifications as a function of operating conditions. The results of these studies allow us to compare quantitatively the chemical stability versus water (corrosion rate from ~150 µm/day to less than 0.25 µm/day under 200–500 °C/15–80 bar P(H2O)) and to go further in comprehension of the aging mechanism of the membrane.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4021956
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-40219562014-05-27 Testing the Chemical/Structural Stability of Proton Conducting Perovskite Ceramic Membranes by in Situ/ex Situ Autoclave Raman Microscopy Slodczyk, Aneta Zaafrani, Oumaya Sharp, Matthew D. Kilner, John A. Dabrowski, Bogdan Lacroix, Olivier Colomban, Philippe Membranes (Basel) Article Ceramics, which exhibit high proton conductivity at moderate temperatures, are studied as electrolyte membranes or electrode components of fuel cells, electrolysers or CO(2) converters. In severe operating conditions (high gas pressure/high temperature), the chemical activity towards potentially reactive atmospheres (water, CO(2), etc.) is enhanced. This can lead to mechanical, chemical, and structural instability of the membranes and premature efficiency loss. Since the lifetime duration of a device determines its economical interest, stability/aging tests are essential. Consequently, we have developed autoclaves equipped with a sapphire window, allowing in situ Raman study in the 25–620 °C temperature region under 1–50 bar of water vapor/gas pressure, both with and without the application of an electric field. Taking examples of four widely investigated perovskites (BaZr(0.9)Yb(0.1)O(3−δ), SrZr(0.9)Yb(0.1)O(3−δ), BaZr(0.25)In(0.75)O(3−δ), BaCe(0.5)Zr(0.3)Y(0.16)Zn(0.04)O(3−δ)), we demonstrate the high potential of our unique set-up to discriminate between good/stable and instable electrolytes as well as the ability to detect and monitor in situ: (i) the sample surface reaction with surrounding atmospheres and the formation of crystalline or amorphous secondary phases (carbonates, hydroxides, hydrates, etc.); and (ii) the structural modifications as a function of operating conditions. The results of these studies allow us to compare quantitatively the chemical stability versus water (corrosion rate from ~150 µm/day to less than 0.25 µm/day under 200–500 °C/15–80 bar P(H2O)) and to go further in comprehension of the aging mechanism of the membrane. MDPI 2013-10-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4021956/ /pubmed/24957060 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes3040311 Text en © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Slodczyk, Aneta
Zaafrani, Oumaya
Sharp, Matthew D.
Kilner, John A.
Dabrowski, Bogdan
Lacroix, Olivier
Colomban, Philippe
Testing the Chemical/Structural Stability of Proton Conducting Perovskite Ceramic Membranes by in Situ/ex Situ Autoclave Raman Microscopy
title Testing the Chemical/Structural Stability of Proton Conducting Perovskite Ceramic Membranes by in Situ/ex Situ Autoclave Raman Microscopy
title_full Testing the Chemical/Structural Stability of Proton Conducting Perovskite Ceramic Membranes by in Situ/ex Situ Autoclave Raman Microscopy
title_fullStr Testing the Chemical/Structural Stability of Proton Conducting Perovskite Ceramic Membranes by in Situ/ex Situ Autoclave Raman Microscopy
title_full_unstemmed Testing the Chemical/Structural Stability of Proton Conducting Perovskite Ceramic Membranes by in Situ/ex Situ Autoclave Raman Microscopy
title_short Testing the Chemical/Structural Stability of Proton Conducting Perovskite Ceramic Membranes by in Situ/ex Situ Autoclave Raman Microscopy
title_sort testing the chemical/structural stability of proton conducting perovskite ceramic membranes by in situ/ex situ autoclave raman microscopy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4021956/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24957060
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes3040311
work_keys_str_mv AT slodczykaneta testingthechemicalstructuralstabilityofprotonconductingperovskiteceramicmembranesbyinsituexsituautoclaveramanmicroscopy
AT zaafranioumaya testingthechemicalstructuralstabilityofprotonconductingperovskiteceramicmembranesbyinsituexsituautoclaveramanmicroscopy
AT sharpmatthewd testingthechemicalstructuralstabilityofprotonconductingperovskiteceramicmembranesbyinsituexsituautoclaveramanmicroscopy
AT kilnerjohna testingthechemicalstructuralstabilityofprotonconductingperovskiteceramicmembranesbyinsituexsituautoclaveramanmicroscopy
AT dabrowskibogdan testingthechemicalstructuralstabilityofprotonconductingperovskiteceramicmembranesbyinsituexsituautoclaveramanmicroscopy
AT lacroixolivier testingthechemicalstructuralstabilityofprotonconductingperovskiteceramicmembranesbyinsituexsituautoclaveramanmicroscopy
AT colombanphilippe testingthechemicalstructuralstabilityofprotonconductingperovskiteceramicmembranesbyinsituexsituautoclaveramanmicroscopy