Nickel-Zirconia Anode Degradation and Triple Phase Boundary Quantification from Microstructural Analysis

Microstructural evolution of anode supported solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC) during medium‐term stack testing has been characterised by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Low acceleration voltage SEM imaging is used to separate the three anode phases (nickel, yttria‐stabilised zirconia and porosity)....

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Published inFuel cells (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) Vol. 9; no. 6; pp. 841 - 851
Main Authors Faes, A., Hessler-Wyser, A., Presvytes, D., Vayenas, C. G., Van herle, J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Weinheim WILEY-VCH Verlag 01.12.2009
WILEY‐VCH Verlag
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Summary:Microstructural evolution of anode supported solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC) during medium‐term stack testing has been characterised by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Low acceleration voltage SEM imaging is used to separate the three anode phases (nickel, yttria‐stabilised zirconia and porosity). Microstructural quantification is obtained using a software code that yields phase proportion, particle size, particle size distribution and a direct measure of triple phase boundary (TPB) density (μm–2). In addition, an anode degradation model is proposed. The model describes the gradual degradation of the anode due to nickel particle sintering and the concomitant loss of TPB. Fundamental operational and structural parameters of the anode can be used to estimate the TPB length change with time from the degradation rate. The combination of experimental results and modelling allows separating the degradation due to sintering of nickel particles from total stack degradation. Anode degradation occurs principally during the first 500 operating hours. For stack tests carried out over more than 1,000 h, anode degradation was responsible for 18 to 41% of the total degradation depending on initial microstructure.
Bibliography:EU FP6 project 'RealSOFC' - No. SES6-502612
European Institute for Energy Research - No. N43/C06/019
ark:/67375/WNG-K1KXW33J-J
istex:EFDFA33D473C8C878B800FFE46F9A3304AAF8CEA
ArticleID:FUCE200800147
ISSN:1615-6846
1615-6854
DOI:10.1002/fuce.200800147