The reaction mechanism and the impact of microstructure on performances for a porous LSCF‐CGO composite used as O2 electrode in SOCs have been investigated. For this purpose, an integrated approach coupling (i) electrochemical testing, (ii) advanced 3D characterizations, and (iii) modeling was proposed. In this frame, a symmetrical cell was tested in a three‐electrode setup and the microstructure of the LSCF‐CGO working electrode was reconstructed by FIB‐SEM tomography. The experimental polarization curves and the impedance diagrams along with the extracted microstructural parameters were used to validate an in‐house microscale electrochemical model. This model considers two parallel reaction pathways with (i) an oxidation/reduction at TPBls (surface path) and (ii) an oxygen transfer at the gas/LSCF interface (bulk path). It was shown that the LSCF‐CGO electrode reaction mechanism is mostly controlled by the charge transfer at TPBls whatever the polarization. Finally, the impact of electrode composition, porosity and particles size on the cell polarization resistance was investigated by using the electrochemical model in combination with a large dataset of synthetic microstructures generated by a geometrical stochastic model. The effect of each microstructural parameter on the electrode performance was analyzed in order to provide useful guidelines for the cell manufacturing.
An elementary kinetic model was developed to predict the electrochemical response of porous LSCF and LSCF-CGO electrodes. The model was validated thanks to experiments performed on symmetrical cells using a three-electrode setup. After the model calibration on polarization curves, it has been shown that the model is able to simulate accurately the experimental impedance diagram at OCP and under polarization without additional fitting.Moreover, the evolution of the electrode polarization resistance with the oxygen partial pressure is well reproduced by the model. The electrodes reaction mechanism was thoroughly analyzed and it has been shown that the transition from the bulk path to the surface path depends on the temperature, the polarization and the oxygen partial pressure. The rate-determining steps for the LSCF electrode have been identified at OCP as function of the oxygen partial pressure.Finally, a sensitivity analysis has been performed to study the impact of LSCF demixing on the electrode performances. For a given decomposition, it has been highlighted that the surface passivation would be more impacting than the decrease of the ionic conductivity. Moreover, the impact of the LSCF decomposition would be more detrimental for the electrode performances evaluated in electrolysis mode.
The electrochemical reactions of hydrogen oxidation and steam reduction have been investigated for a porous cermet electrode made of Ni and 3YSZ. The electrochemical characterizations have been performed over a large range of gas compositions at 700°C. It has been shown that the fuel electrode response is activated by the potential under anodic current while a limiting current density appears under cathodic polarization. Moreover, the impedance diagrams exhibit a shape representative of a kind of finite-length Gerischer element with a low-frequency contribution sensitive to the steam content. To interpret these experimental results, a continuous dynamic model has been developed by describing the mass and charge transfers within the electrode. The reaction has been divided into a sequence of elementary steps considering two scenarios of charge transfer based on the oxygen and hydrogen spillover mechanisms. Threedimensional reconstructions obtained by synchrotron X-ray nano-holotomography have been used to provide the cermet structural properties for the simulations. The numerical computations have shown that the hydrogen spillover scenario is the most appropriate mechanism to reproduce correctly the experiments. Besides, the electrode response is controlled by the charge transfer at triple phase boundary lengths, the oxygen vacancies migration in the 3YSZ network and a pure chemical surface process depending on the polarization. In fuel cell mode, desorption of water molecules from 3YSZ would co-limit the electrode response, while in electrolysis mode, the steam adsorption on Ni would become one of the rate determining steps. Finally, a sensitivity analysis has shown that surface diffusion would also play a key role in the electrode response.
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