Fabrication by Co-extrusion and electrochemical characterization of micro-tubular hollow fibre solid oxide fuel cells
Electrochemistry Communications 12(6): 792-795
Article 2010 English
Authors
ND
Nicolas Droushiotis
UD
Uttam Doraswami
DI
Douglas G. Ivey
Abstract
1 min read
A phase inversion process was used to co-extrude cerium–gadolinium oxide (Ce0.9Gd0.1O1.95)/NiO–CGO dual-layer hollow fibres (HF), which were then sintered to form, respectively, the electrolyte and high porosity anode precursor of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) with anode inner diameter of 0.8mm. Graded CGO–lanthanum strontium cobalt ferrite (La0.6Sr0.4Fe0.8Co0.2O3) cathode layers were then painted onto the CGO electrolyte to form a micro-tubular HF-SOFC. With a carefully designed anode current collector, this produced maximum power densities of 1186–5864Wm−2 at 450–570°C. High magnification imaging analysis revealed large three-phase boundary regions within the anode, a dense electrolyte layer and clearly highlighted the multiple CGO–LSCF cermet and pure LSCF cathode layers. The performance of the HF-SOFC with a twenty millimetre active length showed no degradation after four thermal cycles between 300°C and 570°C.
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