The oxidation of dry Carbon Monoxide (CO) in Intermediate Temperature Solid Oxide Fuel Cells (IT-SOFCs) has been studied using a three electrode assembly. Ni/CGO:CGO:LSCF/CGO three electrode pellet cells at 500, 550 and 600C were exposed to dry carbon monoxide for fixed periods of time, at open circuit and under load at 50 and 100 mA cm -2 , in an aggressive test designed to accelerate electrode degradation. It is shown that if the anode is kept under load during exposure to dry CO, degradation in anode performance can be minimised, and that under most conditions the anode showed significant irreversible degradation in performance after subsequent load cycling on dry H 2 . Only at 500C and at 100 mA cm -2 was the degradation in performance after operation on dry CO and subsequent load cycling on dry H 2 within the background degradation rates measured. Where anode performance was compromised, this appeared to be caused by a reduction in the exchange current density for hydrogen oxidation, and the relatively large degradation after load cycling on dry H 2 was primarily caused by an increase in the series resistance of the anode. It is suggested that this increase in series resistance is associated with the removal of carbon deposited in the non-electrochemically active region of the electrode during operation on dry CO, and that operation under load inhibits carbon deposition in the active region.
IntroductionInvestigations of Ni cermet anodes operating on CO or CO/CO 2 mixtures have been reported by a number of authors (Mizusaki, Aoki et al. 1990;Eguchi, Setoguchi et al. 1993; 2.Mizusaki, Tagawa et al. 1994;Yoshida, Yamamoto et al. 1994;Aaberg, Tunold et al. 1996;Holtappels, De Haart et al. 1999;Matsuzaki, Hishinuma et al. 1999;Matsuzaki and Yasuda 2000;Lauvstad, Tunold et al. 2002;Weber, Sauer et al. 2002;Jiang and Virkar 2003;Gemmen and Trembly 2006;Sukeshini, Habibzadeh et al. 2006). However these have so far been limited to YSZ containing anodes, and temperatures of 700C and above. Furthermore, thermodynamics predict that in both dry fuels and at temperatures of 600C and below, which are of interest for IT-SOFC operation, carbon deposition is a significant problem. This requires dilution of carbon containing fuel streams with the products of oxidation, or oxygen.The steam to carbon ratio is often used to predict the propensity of carbon deposition under such conditions, most often presented in the form of C-H-O diagrams as shown by . However, thermodynamic predictions are only applicable in ideal conditions, and in an operating fuel cell the reaction kinetics must also be considered. In addition it is also known that; maintaining a fuel cell at reasonable currents can have a protective effect by reducing carbon deposition in the electrochemically active region of the anode (Weber, Sauer et al. 2002;Gunji, Wen et al. 2004); and that novel anode materials can help prevent carbon deposition demonstrated by Brett, Atkinson et al. (2005); and even that some carbon deposition can be beneficial as...