1 research outputs found
High-Performance Protonic Ceramic Electrochemical Cells
Protonic
ceramic electrochemical cells (PCECs) have attracted considerable
attention owing to their ability to reversibly convert chemical fuels
into electricity at low temperatures below 600 °C. However, extreme
sintering conditions during conventional convection-based heating
induce critical problems for PCECs such as nonstoichiometric electrolytes
and microstructural coarsening of the electrodes, leading to performance
deterioration. Therefore, we fabricated PCECs via a microwave-assisted
sintering process (MW-PCEC). Owing to the ultrafast ramping rate (∼50
°C/min) with bipolar rotation and the resistive heating nature
of microwave-assisted sintering, undesirable cation diffusion and
grain growth were effectively suppressed, thus producing PCECs with
stoichiometric electrolytes and nanostructured fuel electrodes. The
MW-PCEC achieved electrochemical performance in both in fuel cell
(0.85 W cm–2) and in electrolysis cell (1.88 A cm–2) modes at 600 °C (70% and 254% higher than the
conventionally sintered PCEC, respectively) demonstrating the effectiveness
of using an ultrafast sintering technique to fabricate high-performance
PCECs
