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High Temperature Alkaline Electrolysis Cells with Metal Foam Based Gas Diffusion Electrodes
Author(s) -
Christodoulos Chatzichristodoulou,
Frank Allebrod,
Mogens Bjerg Mogensen
Publication year - 2016
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 - 10.1149/2.0051611jes
Subject(s) - electrolysis , electrolyte , polymer electrolyte membrane electrolysis , high temperature electrolysis , materials science , alkaline water electrolysis , electrode , electrolytic cell , gaseous diffusion , diffusion , electrocatalyst , high pressure electrolysis , current density , hydrogen , chemical engineering , bar (unit) , gas diffusion electrode , stack (abstract data type) , prussian blue , chemistry , electrochemistry , physics , engineering , thermodynamics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , meteorology , computer science , programming language
Electrodes DTU Orbit (17/11/2019) High Temperature Alkaline Electrolysis Cells with Metal Foam Based Gas Diffusion Electrodes Alkaline electrolysis cells operating at 250°C and 40 bar are able to convert electrical energy into hydrogen at very high efficiencies and power densities. In the present work we demonstrate the application of a PTFE hydrophobic network and Ag nanowires as oxygen evolution electrocatalyst in the metal foam based gas diffusion electrodes. A novel cell production method, based on tape casting and hot pressing, was developed which allows to increase the cell size from lab scale (1 cm2) to areas of 25 cm2 or larger. The thickness of the electrolyte matrix could be adjusted to only 200 μm, achieving a serial resistance and total area specific resistance of only 60 mΩ cm2 and 150 mΩ cm2, respectively, at 200°C and 20 bar, yielding a record high current density of 3.75 A cm-2 at a cell voltage of 1.75 V. Encouraging long-term stability was obtained over 400 h of continuous electrolysis. This novel cell concept promises more than a 10-fold improvement in power density, compared to conventional alkaline electrolysis cells, and thereby equivalent reduction in stack size and cost.

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