Significant mass-transport resistances in polymer-electrolyte-fuel-cell catalyst layers (CLs) impose a lower limit on Pt-loading levels, hindering widespread fuel-cell commercialization. The origin of this resistance remains unclear. Minimization of CL mass-transport resistance is imperative to achieve better CL design and performance. In this paper, an operando method based on H 2 limiting current is used to characterize and quantify CL resistance in traditional porous Pt/carbon-based electrodes. CL sub-resistances are isolated using continuum multiscale modeling and experiments, investigating the effects of reactant molecular weight, pressure, and ionomer to carbon weight ratio. The results expose CL resistance including both interfacial and transport components, although the majority of the CL resistance is ascribed to a local resistance close to the Pt reaction sites, which includes interfacial resistance and local transport resistance. Variations in temperature, humidity, and primary particle loading (Pt:C ratio) highlight the impact of operating conditions and CL design parameters on CL sub-resistances. The observed trends guide optimization of CL design to achieve novel low-loaded fuel-cell electrodes.
In situ electrochemical diagnostics designed to probe ionomer interactions with platinum and carbon were applied to relate ionomer coverage and conformation, gleaned from anion adsorption data, with O 2 transport resistance for low-loaded (0.05 mg Pt cm −2 ) platinum-supported Vulcan carbon (Pt/Vu)-based electrodes in a polymer electrolyte fuel cell. Coupling the in situ diagnostic data with ex situ characterization of catalyst inks and electrode structures, the effect of ink composition is explained by both ink-level interactions that dictate the electrode microstructure during fabrication and the resulting local ionomer distribution near catalyst sites. Electrochemical techniques (CO displacement and ac impedance) show that catalyst inks with higher water content increase ionomer (sulfonate) interactions with Pt sites without significantly affecting ionomer coverage on the carbon support. Surprisingly, the higher anion adsorption is shown to have a minor impact on specific activity, while exhibiting a complex relationship with oxygen transport. Ex situ characterization of ionomer suspensions and catalyst/ionomer inks indicates that the lower ionomer coverage can be correlated with the formation of large ionomer aggregates and weaker ionomer/catalyst interactions in low-water content inks. These larger ionomer aggregates resulted in increased local oxygen transport resistance, namely, through the ionomer film, and reduced performance at high current density. In the water-rich inks, the ionomer aggregate size decreases, while stronger ionomer/Pt interactions are observed. The reduced ionomer aggregation improves transport resistance through the ionomer film, while the increased adsorption leads to the emergence of resistance at the ionomer/Pt interface. Overall, the high current density performance is shown to be a nonmonotonic function of ink water content, scaling with the local gas (H 2 , O 2 ) transport resistance resulting from pore, thin film, and interfacial phenomena.
Rapid improvements in polymer-electrolyte fuel-cell (PEFC) performance have been driven by the development of commercially available ion-conducting polymers (ionomers) that are employed as membranes and catalyst binders in membraneelectrode assemblies. Commercially available ionomers are based on a perfluorinated chemistry comprised of a polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) matrix that imparts low gas permeability and high mechanical strength but introduces significant mass-transport losses in the electrodes. These transport losses currently limit PEFC performance, especially for low Pt loadings. In this study, we present a novel ionomer incorporating a glassy amorphous matrix based on a perfluoro(2methylene-4-methyl-1,3-dioxolane) (PFMMD) backbone. The novel backbone chemistry induces structural changes in the ionomer, restricting ionomer domain swelling under hydration while disrupting matrix crystallinity. These structural 1 changes slightly reduce proton conductivity while significantly improving gas permeability. The performance implications of this tradeoff are assessed, which reveal the potential for substantial performance improvement by incorporation of highly permeable ionomers as the functional catalyst binder. These results underscore the significance of tailoring material chemistry to specific device requirements, where ionomer chemistry should be rationally designed to match the local transport requirements of the device architecture.
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