4.6 Article

Computational design of cobalt-free mixed proton-electron conductors for solid oxide electrochemical cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 5, Issue 23, Pages 11825-11833

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7ta00338b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of University and Research (MIUR) [PRIN 2012NB3KLK]
  2. ENEA
  3. Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development
  4. Italian and European research programmes

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Proton-conducting solid-oxide electrolyzer and fuel cells (PC-SOECs/FCs) represent viable, intermediate-temperature green technologies for H-2 production and conversion. While PC ceramics have been extensively investigated as electrolytes for PC-SOECs/FCs, the development of corresponding singlephase electrode components has been hindered by difficulties in finding efficient mixed proton-electron conductors (MPECs), with also effective catalytic activity toward oxygen reduction and evolution reactions (ORR/OER). To address this challenge, we applied first-principles methods (PBE+U) to design new perovskite-oxide MPEC electrodes based on the known BaZrO3 PC ceramic. Our strategy has been to modify the parent material by substituting Zr with earth abundant transition metals, namely Mn and Fe. We found Zr : Mn and Zr : Fe ratios of 0.75 : 0.25 to be sufficient to obtain electronic structural features that can enable electric conductivity. We also investigated other relevant processes for MPEC-based electrodes: hydration, proton migration, and ORR/OER electrocatalysis. From calculations of key descriptors associated with these processes, we found that Zr substitution with Mn or Fe delivers in both cases promising PC-SOEC/FC electrodes. Moreover, our first-principles results highlight the specific qualities of Mn and Fe: the first provides better electronic features and electrocatalytic activities, whereas the latter allows for better hydration and proton migration. In perspective, our findings present clear indications for the experimental implementation and test of new low-cost materials for solid-oxide electrochemical cells.

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