Steam Electrolysis Using a Microtubular Solid Oxide Fuel Cell
Author(s) -
M. Laguna,
Roberto Campana,
Á. Larrea,
John A. Kilner,
V. M. Orera
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of the electrochemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.258
H-Index - 271
eISSN - 1945-7111
pISSN - 0013-4651
DOI - 10.1149/1.3332832
Subject(s) - high temperature electrolysis , polymer electrolyte membrane electrolysis , electrolysis , materials science , high pressure electrolysis , yttria stabilized zirconia , solid oxide fuel cell , electrolytic cell , hydrogen production , electrolyte , oxide , hydrogen , electrode , chemical engineering , hydrogen fuel , cubic zirconia , chemistry , metallurgy , ceramic , engineering , organic chemistry
4 páginas, 3 figuras.Reversible operation of a microtubular solid oxide fuel cell SOFC with high electrochemical efficiency is reported. These devices can ideally produce hydrogen from electricity and steam solid oxide electrolyser SOE and then use the stored hydrogen to generate electricity and heat SOFC, acting as a storage device for the electrical energy. A fuel-electrode-supported Ni–yttriastabilized zirconia YSZ/YSZ/La0.8Sr0.2 0.98MnO3 cell, 2.4 mm in diameter and 20m of electrolyte thickness, was evaluated in\udan electrolysis mode as a function of the steam concentration supplied to the Ni/YSZ electrode. A good cell performance was obtained at temperatures as high as 950°C for the electrolysis operation. At 850°C, the cell withstood current densities of −1 A/cm2 at 1.3 V with steam utilization of 16.5%. The production of hydrogen in the electrolyzer was tested by mass spectrometry. Their performance, especially in the SOE mode, is very promising for high temperature electrolysis applications.\udVoltage–current curves present an S-shaped nonlinear behavior in the electrolysis mode with a tendency to saturate at high current density values. The cell could sustain current densities as high as −6A/cm2 at 1.5V, using 70% H2O/15% H2/15% N2 as a fuel with an area-specific resistance of the cell of 0.26cm2. The origin of this effect is discussed.\ud© 2010 The Electrochemical Society.The authors thank UKERC NERC-TSEC program grant no. NE/C516169/1 and grants MAT2009-14324-C02-01, GA-LC-009/2009, and CIT-120000-2007-50 financed by the Spanish government, and DGA-Caixa and Feder program of the European Community for funding the project. R.C. and M.A.L.-B. also thank\udIKERLAN-Energía and the JAE-program CSIC for financial support.Peer reviewe
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