Degradation behavior of a polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell employing metallic bipolar plates under reverse current condition

Authors
Eom, KwangSupCho, EunAeNam, Suk-WooLim, Tae-HoonJang, Jong HyunKim, Hyoung-JuhnHong, Bo KiYang, Yoo Chang
Issue Date
2012-09-01
Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Citation
ELECTROCHIMICA ACTA, v.78, pp.324 - 330
Abstract
To examine durability of metallic bipolar plates (Bps) under reverse current conditions, the degradation of PEMFC employing graphite, bare 316L, and CrN-coated 316L BPs is investigated via a 1.4V pulse cycling test. After 20 cycles, the average voltage decay rate at 160 mA cm(-2) is 6.8, 16.8, and 12.0 mV cycle(-1) for the single cell using graphite, bare 316L, and CrN-coated 316L BPs, respectively. SEM, EPMA, and TEM analyses of the cathodes that experienced an extraordinary high voltage of 1.4 V show that carbon corrosion and Pt migration/agglomeration occur similarly for the single cells, irrespective of the bipolar plate material. In contrast, in the membrane tested with bare 316L and CrN-coated 316L, Fe and Cr are detected; the amounts of Fe and Cr in the membrane are higher for bare 316L than for CrN-coated 316L. The membrane contamination results in a decrease in the ionic conductivity of the membranes, which mainly contributes to the faster performance decay of the single cells employing bare 316L and CrN-coated 316L bipolar plates. Thus, if automotive PEMFCs using metallic BPs are exposed to reverse current conditions upon start/stop cycles, metal contamination of the membrane could accelerate the performance decay in addition to the cathode degradation, such as carbon corrosion and Pt migration/agglomeration. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords
OXYGEN PARTIAL-PRESSURE; STAINLESS-STEEL; CORROSION BEHAVIOR; PEMFC; DURABILITY; CATHODE; CONDUCTIVITY; ENVIRONMENT; MECHANISM; HYDROGEN; OXYGEN PARTIAL-PRESSURE; STAINLESS-STEEL; CORROSION BEHAVIOR; PEMFC; DURABILITY; CATHODE; CONDUCTIVITY; ENVIRONMENT; MECHANISM; HYDROGEN; Polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell; Bipolar plate; Degradation; 1.4 V pulse cycling; Stainless steel bipolar plate
ISSN
0013-4686
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/128881
DOI
10.1016/j.electacta.2012.06.024
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2012
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

BROWSE