Published 2016
| Version v1
Publication
Experimental method to determine the changes of Ni content in operated SOFC anodes
Contributors
Description
The performance of an anode supported SOFC during operation depends on the stability
and reliability of the cell components vs. time. This paper focuses on the anode with
special attention given to the active part at the interface with the electrolyte. An original
method to quantify the local Ni content in the anode of solid oxide fuel cells is presented
and documented with examples coming from its application on button cells aged in various
conditions of fuel utilization and temperature. The results are compared with the original Ni
amount in a as sintered state (i.e. green) cell, and a freshly reduced (i.e. pristine) cell.
The collected data describes with cost effective method the Ni content in the first 10 μm
from the electrolyte and then in the remaining part of the anode. The first results obtained
on operated and pristine cells has shown an initial Ni depletion homogeneously distributed
on the whole volume. Important differences were noticed in cells operated for a few
hundred hours especially in the active zone of the anode.
The method uses the quantitative data in weight percent obtained by a calibrated EDXS
coupled with an SEM from frames recorded at 5000x of magnification (total corresponding
area of 3018.75 μm2) of a polished cross section of the anode. Adjacent areas from the
interface with the electrolyte to the edge of the anode are analyzed. The method presented
in this paper renders sensitive to local variations in the Ni content once the Zr content is
assumed unaffected by cell production and cell operation.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/895430
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/895430
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE