Back to Search Start Over

Intermediate temperature fuel cells via an ion-pair coordinated polymer electrolyte

Authors :
Cortney R. Kreller
Yu Seung Kim
Kwan-Soo Lee
S. Elango Elangovan
Mahlon S. Wilson
Rangachary Mukundan
Sandip Maurya
Dennis Larsen
Source :
Energy & Environmental Science. 11:979-987
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2018.

Abstract

Fuel cells are attractive devices that convert chemical energy into electricity through the direct electrochemical reaction of hydrogen and oxygen. Intermediate temperature fuel cells operated at 200–300 °C can simplify water and thermal managements, enable the use of non-precious or low-loading precious metal catalysts and provide insensitivity toward fuel and air impurities such as carbon monoxide. However, the performance of current intermediate temperature fuel cells is poor due to a lack of highly-conductive membrane electrolytes and optimal electrodes designed for these fuel cells. Here, we demonstrate high-performing intermediate temperature fuel cells that use SnP2O7–polymer composite membranes and a quaternary ammonium-biphosphate ion-pair coordinated polymer electrolyte in the electrodes. The peak power density of the fuel cell under H2 and O2 reached 870 mW cm−2 at 240 °C with minimal performance loss under exposure to 25% carbon monoxide.

Details

ISSN :
17545706 and 17545692
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Energy & Environmental Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........fa4bc72e227420b0354f7cbb3b8d24c5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c7ee03595k