4.6 Article

Study on Zinc Oxide-Based Electrolytes in Low-Temperature Solid Oxide Fuel Cells

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma11010040

Keywords

semiconducting-ionic conductor; solid oxide fuel cells; zinc oxide; composite electrolyte; proton conduction

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51502084, 51372075]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province [2015CFA120]
  3. Swedish Research Council [621-2011-4983]
  4. European Commission FP7 TriSOFC-project [303454]

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Semiconducting-ionic conductors have been recently described as excellent electrolyte membranes for low-temperature operation solid oxide fuel cells (LT-SOFCs). In the present work, two new functional materials based on zinc oxide (ZnO)-a legacy material in semiconductors but exceptionally novel to solid state ionics-are developed as membranes in SOFCs for the first time. The proposed ZnO and ZnO-LCP (La/Pr doped CeO2) electrolytes are respectively sandwiched between two Ni0.8Co0.15Al0.05Li-oxide (NCAL) electrodes to construct fuel cell devices. The assembled ZnO fuel cell demonstrates encouraging power outputs of 158-482 mW cm(-2) and high open circuit voltages (OCVs) of 1-1.06 V at 450-550 degrees C, while the ZnO-LCP cell delivers significantly enhanced performance with maximum power density of 864 mW cm(-2) and OCV of 1.07 V at 550 degrees C. The conductive properties of the materials are investigated. As a consequence, the ZnO electrolyte and ZnO-LCP composite exhibit extraordinary ionic conductivities of 0.09 and 0.156 S cm(-1) at 550 degrees C, respectively, and the proton conductive behavior of ZnO is verified. Furthermore, performance enhancement of the ZnO-LCP cell is studied by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), which is found to be as a result of the significantly reduced grain boundary and electrode polarization resistances. These findings indicate that ZnO is a highly promising alternative semiconducting-ionic membrane to replace the electrolyte materials for advanced LT-SOFCs, which in turn provides a new strategic pathway for the future development of electrolytes.

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