Highly active and CO2-tolerant Sr2Fe1.3Ga0.2Mo0.5O6-δ cathode for intermediate-temperature solid oxide fuel cells

Chunming Xu, Kening Sun, Xiaoxia Yang, Minjian Ma, Rongzheng Ren, Jinshuo Qiao, Zhenhua Wang, Shuying Zhen, Wang Sun*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

63 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The development of cathode materials, with high catalytic activity toward oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), structural stability and CO2 tolerance, is an important research direction for the successful realization of intermediate-temperature solid oxide fuel cells (IT-SOFCs). Herein, a novel double perovskite mixed ionic conductor, i.e., Sr2Fe1.3Ga0.2Mo0.5O6-δ (SFGM), is developed by Ga-doping at Fe-sites of Sr2Fe1.5Mo0.5O6-δ (SFM) and evaluated as a cathode material in IT-SOFCs. At 750 °C, the area specific resistance (ASR) of SFGM cathode is found to be 0.099 Ω cm2, which is ~50% lower than SFM cathode (0.224 Ω cm2) in 20% O2/N2 atmosphere. Moreover, SFGM exhibits outstanding CO2 tolerance due to its excellent CO2 adsorption resistance compared with SFM. The ASR of SFGM remains stable at ~0.13 Ω cm2 during 100 h of continuous operation in 5% CO2-containing air. In addition, a large-sized SFGM cathode (30 cm2) is utilized in anode-supported flat-tube SOFCs to demonstrate the potential of SFGM in practical applications. At 750 °C, the as-prepared SFGM-based single-cell provides a stable power of 12 W for 291 h in 5% CO2-containing air. The superior electrochemical performance and outstanding CO2 tolerance of SFGM are promising features for the rapid development of IT-SOFCs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number227722
JournalJournal of Power Sources
Volume450
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 29 Feb 2020

Keywords

  • CO tolerance
  • Cathode
  • Oxygen reduction reaction
  • Perovskite oxides
  • Solid oxide fuel cells

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Highly active and CO2-tolerant Sr2Fe1.3Ga0.2Mo0.5O6-δ cathode for intermediate-temperature solid oxide fuel cells'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this