Carbon Corrosion in PEM Fuel Cells during Drive Cycle Operation
Author(s) -
Rod L. Borup,
Dionissios D. Papadias,
Rangachary Mukundan,
Dusan Spernjak,
David A. Langlois,
Rajesh Ahluwalia,
Karren L. More,
Stephen Grot
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
ecs transactions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.235
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1938-6737
pISSN - 1938-5862
DOI - 10.1149/06917.1029ecst
Subject(s) - corrosion , materials science , catalysis , carbon fibers , porosity , proton exchange membrane fuel cell , thinning , layer (electronics) , composite material , chemical engineering , chemistry , composite number , engineering , ecology , biochemistry , biology
One of the major contributors to degradation involves the electrocatalyst, including the corrosion of the carbons used as catalyst supports, which leads to changes in the catalyst layer structure. We have measured and quantified carbon corrosion during drive cycle operation and as a variation of the upper and lower potential limits used during drive cycle operation. The amount of carbon corrosion is exacerbated by the voltage cycling inherent in the drive cycle compared with constant potential operation. The potential gap between upper and lower potentials appears to be more important than the absolute operating potentials in the normal operating potential regime (0.40V to 0.95V) as changes in the measured carbon corrosion are similar when the upper potential was lower compared to raising the lower potential. Catalyst layer thinning was observed during the simulated drive cycle operation which had an associated decrease in catalyst layer porosity. This catalyst layer thinning is not due solely to carbon corrosion, although carbon corrosion likely plays a role; much of this thinning must be from compaction of the material in the catalyst layer. The decrease in catalyst layer porosity leads to additional performance losses due to mass transport losses.
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