Degradation of MCFC Materials in a 81 cm2 Single Cell Operated Under Alternated Fuel Cell/Electrolysis Mode

The possibility of producing hydrogen from molten carbonate steam electrolysis using the well-established Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (MCFC) technology was explored in this work. For this purpose, a 81 cm2 MCFC single cell assembled with conventional cell materials was operated under alternated fuel...

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Main Authors: Stefano Frangini, Massimilano Della Pietra, Livia Della Seta, Claudia Paoletti, Juan Pedro Pérez-Trujillo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Energy Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenrg.2021.653531/full
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spelling doaj-eff50a0beba5483aab0b4a8a981243ba2021-04-29T06:38:35ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Energy Research2296-598X2021-04-01910.3389/fenrg.2021.653531653531Degradation of MCFC Materials in a 81 cm2 Single Cell Operated Under Alternated Fuel Cell/Electrolysis ModeStefano Frangini0Massimilano Della Pietra1Livia Della Seta2Claudia Paoletti3Juan Pedro Pérez-Trujillo4TERIN-PSU-ABI, Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development (ENEA), CR Casaccia, Rome, ItalyTERIN-PSU-ABI, Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development (ENEA), CR Casaccia, Rome, ItalyTERIN-PSU-ABI, Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development (ENEA), CR Casaccia, Rome, ItalyTERIN-PSU-ABI, Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development (ENEA), CR Casaccia, Rome, ItalyDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, DICIS, University of Guanajuato, Guanajuato, MexicoThe possibility of producing hydrogen from molten carbonate steam electrolysis using the well-established Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (MCFC) technology was explored in this work. For this purpose, a 81 cm2 MCFC single cell assembled with conventional cell materials was operated under alternated fuel cell/electrolysis conditions at 650°C in a binary eutectic Li2CO3-K2CO3 electrolyte for about 400 h after an initial period of 650 h in which the cell worked only in the usual MCFC mode. A rapid cell performance loss in terms of cell internal resistance and electrode polarization was observed as soon as the cell started to work in the alternated fuel cell/electrolysis mode. After test completion, a post-mortem analysis was conducted to correlate the electrochemical response with cell materials degradation. Cell materials of the reverse cell were compared against a reference single cell that was assembled with the same materials and operated only in the fuel cell mode under comparable experimental conditions. Post-mortem analysis allowed to identify several serious stability issues of conventional MCFC materials when used in alternated operation modes. Thus, although the electrolyte matrix appeared almost unaffected, a significant amount of dissolved nickel was found in the matrix indicating that electrolysis operations promote an increasing chemical instability of the NiO oxygen electrode. A serious reduction of electrode porosity was also observed in both NiO oxygen and Ni metal fuel electrodes, which could explain the higher polarization resistance of the reversible cell in comparison to the reference MCFC cell. Furthermore, the oxygen current collector made with conventional 316L stainless steel was found to be seriously corroded under the alternated operation modes. Thus, the observed rapid increase in internal resistance in the reverse cell could be caused, at least in part, by an increased contact resistance between the oxygen electrode and the corroding current collector structure. Possible solutions for improving stability of electrodes and of the oxygen current collector in reverse MCFC cells were proposed and discussed in the final part of the work.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenrg.2021.653531/fullmolten carbonate fuel cellpost-mortem analysismaterials degradationcoating protectioncore-shell electrodesreverse cell
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefano Frangini
Massimilano Della Pietra
Livia Della Seta
Claudia Paoletti
Juan Pedro Pérez-Trujillo
spellingShingle Stefano Frangini
Massimilano Della Pietra
Livia Della Seta
Claudia Paoletti
Juan Pedro Pérez-Trujillo
Degradation of MCFC Materials in a 81 cm2 Single Cell Operated Under Alternated Fuel Cell/Electrolysis Mode
Frontiers in Energy Research
molten carbonate fuel cell
post-mortem analysis
materials degradation
coating protection
core-shell electrodes
reverse cell
author_facet Stefano Frangini
Massimilano Della Pietra
Livia Della Seta
Claudia Paoletti
Juan Pedro Pérez-Trujillo
author_sort Stefano Frangini
title Degradation of MCFC Materials in a 81 cm2 Single Cell Operated Under Alternated Fuel Cell/Electrolysis Mode
title_short Degradation of MCFC Materials in a 81 cm2 Single Cell Operated Under Alternated Fuel Cell/Electrolysis Mode
title_full Degradation of MCFC Materials in a 81 cm2 Single Cell Operated Under Alternated Fuel Cell/Electrolysis Mode
title_fullStr Degradation of MCFC Materials in a 81 cm2 Single Cell Operated Under Alternated Fuel Cell/Electrolysis Mode
title_full_unstemmed Degradation of MCFC Materials in a 81 cm2 Single Cell Operated Under Alternated Fuel Cell/Electrolysis Mode
title_sort degradation of mcfc materials in a 81 cm2 single cell operated under alternated fuel cell/electrolysis mode
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Energy Research
issn 2296-598X
publishDate 2021-04-01
description The possibility of producing hydrogen from molten carbonate steam electrolysis using the well-established Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (MCFC) technology was explored in this work. For this purpose, a 81 cm2 MCFC single cell assembled with conventional cell materials was operated under alternated fuel cell/electrolysis conditions at 650°C in a binary eutectic Li2CO3-K2CO3 electrolyte for about 400 h after an initial period of 650 h in which the cell worked only in the usual MCFC mode. A rapid cell performance loss in terms of cell internal resistance and electrode polarization was observed as soon as the cell started to work in the alternated fuel cell/electrolysis mode. After test completion, a post-mortem analysis was conducted to correlate the electrochemical response with cell materials degradation. Cell materials of the reverse cell were compared against a reference single cell that was assembled with the same materials and operated only in the fuel cell mode under comparable experimental conditions. Post-mortem analysis allowed to identify several serious stability issues of conventional MCFC materials when used in alternated operation modes. Thus, although the electrolyte matrix appeared almost unaffected, a significant amount of dissolved nickel was found in the matrix indicating that electrolysis operations promote an increasing chemical instability of the NiO oxygen electrode. A serious reduction of electrode porosity was also observed in both NiO oxygen and Ni metal fuel electrodes, which could explain the higher polarization resistance of the reversible cell in comparison to the reference MCFC cell. Furthermore, the oxygen current collector made with conventional 316L stainless steel was found to be seriously corroded under the alternated operation modes. Thus, the observed rapid increase in internal resistance in the reverse cell could be caused, at least in part, by an increased contact resistance between the oxygen electrode and the corroding current collector structure. Possible solutions for improving stability of electrodes and of the oxygen current collector in reverse MCFC cells were proposed and discussed in the final part of the work.
topic molten carbonate fuel cell
post-mortem analysis
materials degradation
coating protection
core-shell electrodes
reverse cell
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenrg.2021.653531/full
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