Cargando…
Designing High Interfacial Conduction beyond Bulk via Engineering the Semiconductor–Ionic Heterostructure CeO(2−δ)/BaZr(0.8)Y(0.2)O(3) for Superior Proton Conductive Fuel Cell and Water Electrolysis Applications
[Image: see text] Proton ceramic fuel cells (PCFCs) are an emerging clean energy technology; however, a key challenge persists in improving the electrolyte proton conductivity, e.g., around 10(–3)–10(–2) S cm(–1) at 600 °C for the well-known BaZr(0.8)Y(0.2)O(3) (BZY), that is far below the required...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
American Chemical Society
2022
|
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9795487/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36590881 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsaem.2c02995 |
Sumario: | [Image: see text] Proton ceramic fuel cells (PCFCs) are an emerging clean energy technology; however, a key challenge persists in improving the electrolyte proton conductivity, e.g., around 10(–3)–10(–2) S cm(–1) at 600 °C for the well-known BaZr(0.8)Y(0.2)O(3) (BZY), that is far below the required 0.1 S cm(–1). Herein, we report an approach for tuning BZY from low bulk to high interfacial conduction by introducing a semiconductor CeO(2−δ) forming a semiconductor–ionic heterostructure CeO(2−δ)/BZY. The interfacial conduction was identified by a significantly higher conductivity obtained from the BZY grain boundary than that of the bulk and a further improvement from the CeO(2−δ)/BZY which achieved a remarkably high proton conductivity of 0.23 S cm(–1). This enabled a high peak power of 845 mW cm(–2) at 520 °C from a PCFC using the CeO(2−δ)/BZY as the electrolyte, in strong contrast to the BZY bulk conduction electrolyte with only 229 mW cm(–2). Furthermore, the CeO(2−δ)/BZY fuel cell was operated under water electrolysis mode, exhibiting a very high current density output of 3.2 A cm(–2) corresponding to a high H(2) production rate, under 2.0 V at 520 °C. The band structure and a built-in-field-assisted proton transport mechanism have been proposed and explained. This work demonstrates an efficient way of tuning the electrolyte from low bulk to high interfacial proton conduction to attain sufficient conductivity required for PCFCs, electrolyzers, and other advanced electrochemical energy technologies. |
---|