4.8 Article

Protonic ceramic electrochemical cells for hydrogen production and electricity generation: exceptional reversibility, stability, and demonstrated faradaic efficiency

Journal

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 206-215

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8ee02865f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy through ARPA-e from United Technologies Research Center [DE-AR0000498]
  2. MRSEC program (NSF) at the Materials Research Center [DMR-1121262]
  3. Pulsed Laser Deposition facility of Northwestern University
  4. EPIC Facility of Northwestern University's NUANCE Center
  5. Soft and Hybrid Nanotechnology Experimental (SHyNE) Resource [NSF ECCS-1542205]
  6. MRSEC program at the Materials Research Center [NSF DMR-1121262]

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We demonstrate exceptional performance for steam electrolysis at intermediate temperatures (500-650 degrees C) using protonic ceramic electrolyte cells comprised of the proton-permeable, high-activity mixed conductor PrBa0.5Sr0.5Co1.5Fe0.5O5+ (PBSCF) as the air electrode, the highly proton-conductive and chemically stable perovskite oxide BaZr0.4Ce0.4Y0.1Yb0.1O3 (BZCYYb4411) as the electrolyte, and a composite of Ni-BZCYYb4411 as the fuel electrode. Cells constructed from this material set have been shown previously to function efficiently in fuel cell mode. We demonstrate here reversible operation, enabling hydrogen production when excess electricity is available and immediate electricity generation from stored hydrogen when power demand is high. The cells are stable under cyclic operation and also under prolonged continuous operation in electrolysis mode, undergoing minimal loss in electrochemical characteristics after 500 h at 550 degrees C. Microstructurally optimized cells yield a remarkable current density of -1.80 A cm(-2) at 600 degrees C and an operating voltage of 1.3 V, of which, based on an electrochemically deduced faradaic efficiency of 76%, -1.37 A cm(-2) contributes to useful hydrogen.

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