Applied current on the suppression of strontium segregation in Sr₂Fe₁.₅Mo₀.₅O₆₋δ electrode for improved oxygen evolution reaction

Strontium surface segregation is the main issue that causes long-term performance degradation in strontium-containing electrodes for solid oxide electrolysis cells. In this research, we effectively suppress strontium segregation by applying an anodic current that drives the segregated strontium back...

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Main Authors: Li, Hao-Yang, Su, Pei-Chen
Other Authors: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169008
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1690082023-06-27T00:56:09Z Applied current on the suppression of strontium segregation in Sr₂Fe₁.₅Mo₀.₅O₆₋δ electrode for improved oxygen evolution reaction Li, Hao-Yang Su, Pei-Chen School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Engineering::Mechanical engineering Perovskite Electrode Strontium Segregation Strontium surface segregation is the main issue that causes long-term performance degradation in strontium-containing electrodes for solid oxide electrolysis cells. In this research, we effectively suppress strontium segregation by applying an anodic current that drives the segregated strontium back to the perovskite lattice and mitigate electrode performance degradation. By monitoring the impedance of Sr2Fe1.5Mo0.5O6-δ (SFM) air electrode under open circuit voltage at high temperature with changing current densities over time, the degradation caused by strontium segregation is verified. The applied current successfully prevent the polarization resistance from increasing is observed. The cell with 0.8 A/cm2 of the applied current increase only 3% of polarization resistance as compared to the cell without applied current after testing at 800 ℃ for 24 h. The atomic ratio of strontium on the SFM electrode surface shows lower strontium content after undergoing applied current, which means that the strontium is indeed migrated back to perovskite lattice under the applied current and result in slower degradation of the SFM electrode. Ministry of Education (MOE) The authors thank the funding support of AcRF Tier 1 project RG181/18 (S) from Ministry of Education, Singapore. 2023-06-27T00:56:09Z 2023-06-27T00:56:09Z 2023 Journal Article Li, H. & Su, P. (2023). Applied current on the suppression of strontium segregation in Sr₂Fe₁.₅Mo₀.₅O₆₋δ electrode for improved oxygen evolution reaction. Applied Materials Today, 31, 101769-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apmt.2023.101769 2352-9407 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169008 10.1016/j.apmt.2023.101769 2-s2.0-85147606277 31 101769 en RG181/18 (S) Applied Materials Today © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Perovskite Electrode
Strontium Segregation
spellingShingle Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Perovskite Electrode
Strontium Segregation
Li, Hao-Yang
Su, Pei-Chen
Applied current on the suppression of strontium segregation in Sr₂Fe₁.₅Mo₀.₅O₆₋δ electrode for improved oxygen evolution reaction
description Strontium surface segregation is the main issue that causes long-term performance degradation in strontium-containing electrodes for solid oxide electrolysis cells. In this research, we effectively suppress strontium segregation by applying an anodic current that drives the segregated strontium back to the perovskite lattice and mitigate electrode performance degradation. By monitoring the impedance of Sr2Fe1.5Mo0.5O6-δ (SFM) air electrode under open circuit voltage at high temperature with changing current densities over time, the degradation caused by strontium segregation is verified. The applied current successfully prevent the polarization resistance from increasing is observed. The cell with 0.8 A/cm2 of the applied current increase only 3% of polarization resistance as compared to the cell without applied current after testing at 800 ℃ for 24 h. The atomic ratio of strontium on the SFM electrode surface shows lower strontium content after undergoing applied current, which means that the strontium is indeed migrated back to perovskite lattice under the applied current and result in slower degradation of the SFM electrode.
author2 School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
author_facet School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Li, Hao-Yang
Su, Pei-Chen
format Article
author Li, Hao-Yang
Su, Pei-Chen
author_sort Li, Hao-Yang
title Applied current on the suppression of strontium segregation in Sr₂Fe₁.₅Mo₀.₅O₆₋δ electrode for improved oxygen evolution reaction
title_short Applied current on the suppression of strontium segregation in Sr₂Fe₁.₅Mo₀.₅O₆₋δ electrode for improved oxygen evolution reaction
title_full Applied current on the suppression of strontium segregation in Sr₂Fe₁.₅Mo₀.₅O₆₋δ electrode for improved oxygen evolution reaction
title_fullStr Applied current on the suppression of strontium segregation in Sr₂Fe₁.₅Mo₀.₅O₆₋δ electrode for improved oxygen evolution reaction
title_full_unstemmed Applied current on the suppression of strontium segregation in Sr₂Fe₁.₅Mo₀.₅O₆₋δ electrode for improved oxygen evolution reaction
title_sort applied current on the suppression of strontium segregation in sr₂fe₁.₅mo₀.₅o₆₋δ electrode for improved oxygen evolution reaction
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169008
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