4.8 Article

Effects of Ink Formulation on Construction of Catalyst Layers for High-Performance Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cells

期刊

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
卷 13, 期 31, 页码 37004-37013

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c06711

关键词

platinum; Pt/C catalyst; catalyst layer; membrane electrode assembly; polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell; PEMFC; ink formulation; MEA fabrication

资金

  1. Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies Office, Office Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
  2. DOE Office of Science [DE-AC02-06CH11357]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The rational design of catalyst layers in a membrane electrode assembly is crucial for high-performance polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells. This study found that the solvent composition significantly affects the pore structure and performance of the catalyst layer, with the appropriate pore structure and enlarged catalyst/ionomer interface leading to improved MEA performance.
Rational design of catalyst layers in a membrane electrode assembly (MEA) is crucial for achieving high-performance polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells. Establishing a clear understanding of the property (catalyst ink)-structure (catalyst layer)-performance (MEA) relationship lays the foundation for this rational design. In this work, a synergistic approach was taken to correlate the ink formulation, the microstructure of catalyst layers, and the resulting MEA performance to establish such a property-structure-performance relationship. The solvent composition (n-PA/H2O mixtures) demonstrated a strong influence on the performance of the MEA fabricated with an 830-EW (Aquivion) ionomer, especially polarization losses of cell activation and mass transport. The performance differences were studied in terms of how the solvent composition affects the catalyst/ionomer interface, ionomer network, and pore structure of the resulting catalyst layers. The ionomer aggregates mainly covered the surface of catalyst aggregates acting as oxygen reduction reaction active sites, and the aggregate sizes of the ionomer and catalyst (revealed by ultrasmall angle X-ray scattering and cryo-transmission electron microscopy) were dictated by tuning the solvent composition, which in turn determined the catalyst/ionomer interface (available active sites). In n-PA/H2O mixtures with 50 similar to 90 wt % H2O, the catalyst agglomerates could be effectively broken up into small aggregates, leading to enhanced kinetic activities. The boiling point of the mixed solvents determined the pore structure of ultimate catalyst layers, as evidenced by mercury porosimetry and scanning electron microscopy. For mixed solvents with a higher boiling point, the catalyst-ionomer aggregates in the ink tend to agglomerate during the solvent evaporation process and finally form larger catalyst-ionomer aggregates in the ultimate catalyst layer, resulting in more secondary pores and thus lower mass transport resistance. Both the enlarged catalyst/ionomer interface and appropriate pore structure were achieved with the catalyst layer fabricated from an n-PA/H2O mixture with 90 wt % H2O, leading to the best MEA performance.

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