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Prabhu Ganesan, Hector Colon, Bala Haran, R. E. White and Branko Popov Department of Chemical Engineering University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208.

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Presentation on theme: "Prabhu Ganesan, Hector Colon, Bala Haran, R. E. White and Branko Popov Department of Chemical Engineering University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208."— Presentation transcript:

1 Prabhu Ganesan, Hector Colon, Bala Haran, R. E. White and Branko Popov Department of Chemical Engineering University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208. La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 Coated Nickel Cathodes for Molten Carbonate Fuel Cells

2 Presentation Outline  Objectives  Prepare a stable cathode material with lower solubility and comparable performance as NiO Coating of La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 using sol-gel process  Characterization Studies  Polarization performance  AAS – Solubility measurements  SEM – Microstructure analysis  EIS  Full cell studies

3 State-of-the Art Molten Carbonate Fuel Cells Component Material / PropertiesProblem/Solution AnodeMaterialNi+10wt% Cr Pore size3 ~ 6  m Porosity 50~70% Thickness 0.5~1.5 mm Sp. Area0.1~1 m 2 /g Creep/Sintering - Ni-Al Alloy Electrolyte retaining - Coating of Oxides CathodeMaterialLithiated NiO Pore size6 ~ 9  m Porosity 80~85% as Ni Thickness 0.5~0.8 mm Sp. Area0.5 m 2 /g NiO dissolution - Stabilized NiO - LiCoO 2 cathode - Modified electrolyte Matrix Material  -LiAlO 2 Pore size0.2 ~ 0.5  m Porosity 50~60% Thickness 0.5 mm Sp. Area0.1~10 m 2 /g Sintering/Thermal Stability - Fiber or large particles Phase stability -  -LiAlO 2 Current Collector MaterialSS316 Chromium Dissolution - Nickel Cladding (Anode) - Fe-Al alloys

4 Cathode Materials for Molten Carbonate Fuel Cells State-of-the-art NiO(Li) Alternate Cathodes LiCoO 2, LiNiO 2 LiCoO 2 Coated Nickel Oxide Ni-Ce and Ni – La 2 O 3 Ni-Nb Surface Alloy Perovskites such as La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 Cobalt Encapsulated Nickel Mixed Lithium Nickel Cobalt Oxides

5 USC Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (Half Cell) Porous Ni Cathode Perforated SUS 304 Current Collector

6 USC Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (Full Cell)

7 Flow chart for Ni electrode preparation Ni Powder Dispersant + Water Milling 24 h Binder Milling 12 h PlasticizerMilling 12 h Filtering Casting De-airing Drying Sintering

8 TGA Behavior of Ni green tape

9 Sintering schedule for Ni electrodes 1 O C/min RT 130 O C 1 O C/min 5 O C/min 230 O C 400 O C 800 O C 130 O C 230 O C 400 O C 800 O C RT 1 h 3 h 5 h 1 h Nitrogen Hydrogen

10 Flow chart for LSC Coated Ni electrode preparation La, Sr, Co-Acetates Dist. Water Stirring at 80 o C Ethylene Glycol Stirring Gel Drying in Vacuum at 90 o C Sintering at 900 o C in Air Citric Acid Ni Electrodes

11 XRD Patterns of La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 at different temperatures

12 SEM Pictures of La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 coated Ni electrode After Sintering at 900°C Bare Ni Electrode LSC Coated Ni Electrode Sintered at 900 o C LSC Coated Ni Electrode after immersion in molten carbonate Melt for 200 hours Magnification X 2000

13 Dissolution Behavior La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 coated Ni electrode at 650 o C

14 Polarization Behavior of Ni

15 Polarization Behavior of La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 coated Ni electrode

16 Comparison of Impedance Behavior of Ni

17 EIS response for La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 coated Ni electrode at 650°C

18 EIS response for La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 coated Ni electrode at 700°C

19 EIS response for La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 coated Ni electrode at 750°C

20 EIS response of La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 coated Ni electrode in Full Cell at 650°C

21 Conclusions  Rate of dissolution of Ni decreased significantly after La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 coating.  The observed increase in polarization may be due to the decrease in porosity and change in surface morphology.  La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3 coated nickel oxides offer better stability in MCFC cathode environment.

22 Financial sponsors - Dept of Energy, National Energy Technology Laboratory Acknowledgements


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