692 research outputs found
Investigation of Cathode Kinetics in SOFC: Model Thin Film SrTi_(1-x)Fe_xO_(3-Ī“) Mixed Conducting Oxides
To understand the kinetics controlling the SOFC cathode processes, a model mixed conducting perovskite materials system, SrTi_(1-x)Fe_xO_(3-Ī“), was selected, offering the ability to systematically control both the levels of electronic and ionic electrical conductivity as well as the energy band structure. This, in combination with considerably simplified electrode geometry, served to demonstrate that the rate of oxygen exchange at the surface of SrTi_(1-x)Fe_xO_(3-Ī“) is only weakly correlated with either high electronic or ionic conductivity, in apparent contradiction with common expectations. On the other hand, evidence was found suggesting the importance of minority electronic species in determining the rate of oxygen exchange. Furthermore, the enrichment of Sr to the surface of the electrodes was found to reduce the oxygen exchange rate constant; this effect becoming more evident with increasing values of x. The observed trends are discussed in relation to the cathodic behavior of MIEC electrodes
Solar to fuels conversion technologies: a perspective
To meet increasing energy needs, while limiting greenhouse gas emissions over the coming decades, power capacity on a large scale will need to be provided from renewable sources, with solar expected to play a central role. While the focus to date has been on electricity generation via photovoltaic (PV) cells, electricity production currently accounts for only about one-third of total primary energy consumption. As a consequence, solar-to-fuel conversion will need to play an increasingly important role and, thereby, satisfy the need to replace high energy density fossil fuels with cleaner alternatives that remain easy to transport and store. The solar refinery concept (Herron et al. in Energy Environ Sci 8:126ā157, 2015), in which captured solar radiation provides energy in the form of heat, electricity or photons, used to convert the basic chemical feedstocks CO[subscript 2] and H[subscript 2]O into fuels, is reviewed as are the key conversion processes based on (1) combined PV and electrolysis, (2) photoelectrochemically driven electrolysis and (3) thermochemical processes, all focused on initially converting H[subscript 2]O and CO[subscript 2] to H[subscript 2] and CO. Recent advances, as well as remaining challenges, associated with solar-to-fuel conversion are discussed, as is the need for an intensive research and development effort to bring such processes to scale.United States. Dept. of Energy. Office of Basic Energy Sciences (Award# DE SC0002633)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Award# DMR-1507047)MIT Skoltech Initiativ
Engineering electrochemical nanoscale oxides
Oxides are playing an increasingly critical role as functional components in the fields of energy conversion/storage, microelectronics, sensors/actuators and catalysis. In turn, their electrical (ionic & electronic), optical and catalytic properties depend sensitively on their defect structure and oxygen nonstoichiometry, typically frozen in during processing, and rarely well defined. This is particularly true for thin films and nanoparticles/wires, where conventional methods, appropriate to bulk materials, do not apply. In this presentation, we review in-situ optical, electrochemical and dilatometric methods, developed or refined in our laboratory, to monitor, analyze and control nonstoichiometry, defect equilibria, transport and optical properties of oxide thin films and nano-sized particles. Examples include materials of interest as electrodes in fuel cells, and as components of sensors, catalysts and memory devices
Study of orientation effect on nanoscale polarization in BaTiO3 thin films using piezoresponse force microscopy
We have investigated the effect of texture on in-plane (IPP) and out- of plane (OPP) polarizations of pulsed-laser-deposited BaTiO3 thin films grown on Pt and La0.5Sr0.5CoO3 (LSCO) buffered Pt electrodes. The OPP and IPP polarizations were observed by piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) for three-dimensional polarization analyses in conjunction with conventional diffraction methods using x-ray diffraction and reflection high energy electron diffraction measurements. BaTiO3 films grown on Pt electrodes exhibited highly (101) preferred orientation with higher IPP component whereas BaTiO3 film grown on LSCO/Pt electrodes showed (001) and (101) orientations with higher OPP component. Measured effective d(33) values of BaTiO3 films deposited on Pt and LSCO/ Pt electrodes were 14.3 and 54.0 pm/ V, respectively. Local piezoelectric strain loops obtained by OPP and IPP-PFM showed that piezoelectric properties were strongly related to film orientation
Typologies of Battering: Uncovering Patterns of Coercive Tactics Used by Abusive Men in a Mixed Methods Study
Coercive control provides a current day feminist understanding of intimate partner violence (IPV). Recent research has demonstrated the significance of coercive control and suggests it provides a more accurate understanding of IPV than using physical violence alone. Utilizing a feminist lens, this studyās first aim was to explore if typologies based on coercive control could be developed. The second and third aims were to explore if demographic differences and differences in masculinity exist across typologies. The final aim of this study was to continue the feminist understanding of IPV using the moral emotions of shame and guilt as an extension of failed masculinity and explore their differences across typologies.
One hundred and thirty-seven heterosexual men were recruited from a mandated battererās intervention program. Using cluster analyses, two potential models emerged. The first, based off quantitative measures, posits a two-cluster structure with a group of batterers who utilize high levels of severe and invasive coercive control, as well as punitive tactics and those who use lower levels of coercive control. The alternative model derived from narratives of coercion around a self-identified worst fight suggests a five-cluster structure. This snapshot in time suggests that batterers show preference to a specific form of coercive control and organize around tactics rather than severity. Using both these models, the remaining aims were explored. Results indicated little to no differences across demographics, masculinity, or moral emotions, suggesting that these variables do not influence why someone uses coercive control. However, results also indicate that coercive control is a viable way of categorizing abuse and that both quantitative and qualitative measurements of coercive control are essential to accurately capturing its use and impact
Photoconductivity analyzed in the frequency domain - an introductory case study of strontium titanate
Strontium titanate (STO, SrTiO3) has been used for many applications in solid state electrochemistry and is considered a standard and model material. Its characteristics, and those of its derivatives such as STF (SrTi0.65Fe0.35O3-x), have been characterized by many groups on various aspects, such as electronic/ionic conductivity, oxygen exchange kinetics and the impact of doping. Recently, the interaction of light with STO/STF has been of increased interest. A persistent photoconductivity has been observed [1] and enhanced oxygen exchange kinetics have been detected, opening up new fields of application, such as a light-driven fuel cell [2].
The reasons behind these effects remain subject to discussion or even speculation as the relation to the relatively large bandgap and the photoresponse at long wavelengths remains unclear. What makes the analysis of these effects difficult is the interplay of many electrochemical and photoelectrochemical processes that contribute to the photoresponse including the electronic and ionic conductivity, the number and nature of charge carriers, charge traps, phonon related effects, and surface reactions. With electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), one can distinguish diverse processes on the basis of their time constants and how they evolve as a function of operating conditions, such as temperature, atmosphere (leading to stoichiometry changes) and illumination. However, the impact of light can only be characterized implicitly as a change in other processes that also prevail in the dark.
Intensity modulated photocurrent/-voltage spectroscopy (IMPS/IMVS) have been shown to reveal valuable information about charge carrier dynamics for photoelectrodes and photovoltaic cells [3]. To the best of our knowledge, these techniques have never been applied to devices or materials that are not photoactive, or in other words, that do not show a photovoltage, such as a symmetrical model cells based on STO or STF. However, with the small signal light perturbation that is the key element of IMPS and IMVS, we can trigger the light effect directly and analyze the system response by its current and voltage signals.
In this contribution, we will begin with a brief introduction into IMPS and IMVS and show how these techniques can be applied to model electrodes consisting of STO and STF. The results are compared to EIS under different illumination and we will show how to extract the relevant information about the photoresponse. By evaluating the activation energies of the different electrochemical and photoelectrochemical processes, we can attribute those to physical effects and clarify some of the previously unknown processes that lead to anomalies observed in STO/STF under illumination.
The capacity of IMPS and IMVS have been underestimated so far and in this contribution, we will conclude with an outlook for their potential to other fields of application, such as ionic motion in perovskite solar cells that are thought to be responsible for their accelerated degradation under illumination.
This work was supported by JSPS Core-to-Core Program, A. Advanced Research Networks: āSolid Oxide Interfaces for Faster Ion Transportā.
References
[1] M. C. Tarun et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 187403, 2013.
[2] G. C. Bunauer, Adv. Funct. Mater. 26, 120, 2016.
[3] D. Klotz et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 18, 23438, 2016
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