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Development of Ni-Sr(V,Ti)O(3-δ) Fuel Electrodes for Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
A series of strontium titanates-vanadates (STVN) with nominal cation composition Sr(1-x)Ti(1-y-z)V(y)Ni(z)O(3-δ) (x = 0–0.04, y = 0.20–0.40 and z = 0.02–0.12) were prepared by a solid-state reaction route in 10% H(2)–N(2) atmosphere and characterized under reducing conditions as potential fuel elect...
Autores principales: | , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8746223/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35009422 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15010278 |
Sumario: | A series of strontium titanates-vanadates (STVN) with nominal cation composition Sr(1-x)Ti(1-y-z)V(y)Ni(z)O(3-δ) (x = 0–0.04, y = 0.20–0.40 and z = 0.02–0.12) were prepared by a solid-state reaction route in 10% H(2)–N(2) atmosphere and characterized under reducing conditions as potential fuel electrode materials for solid oxide fuel cells. Detailed phase evolution studies using XRD and SEM/EDS demonstrated that firing at temperatures as high as 1200 °C is required to eliminate undesirable secondary phases. Under such conditions, nickel tends to segregate as a metallic phase and is unlikely to incorporate into the perovskite lattice. Ceramic samples sintered at 1500 °C exhibited temperature-activated electrical conductivity that showed a weak p(O(2)) dependence and increased with vanadium content, reaching a maximum of ~17 S/cm at 1000 °C. STVN ceramics showed moderate thermal expansion coefficients (12.5–14.3 ppm/K at 25–1100 °C) compatible with that of yttria-stabilized zirconia (8YSZ). Porous STVN electrodes on 8YSZ solid electrolytes were fabricated at 1100 °C and studied using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy at 700–900 °C in an atmosphere of diluted humidified H(2) under zero DC conditions. As-prepared STVN electrodes demonstrated comparatively poor electrochemical performance, which was attributed to insufficient intrinsic electrocatalytic activity and agglomeration of metallic nickel during the high-temperature synthetic procedure. Incorporation of an oxygen-ion-conducting Ce(0.9)Gd(0.1)O(2-δ) phase (20–30 wt.%) and nano-sized Ni as electrocatalyst (≥1 wt.%) into the porous electrode structure via infiltration resulted in a substantial improvement in electrochemical activity and reduction of electrode polarization resistance by 6–8 times at 900 °C and ≥ one order of magnitude at 800 °C. |
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