Applied Sciences (Dec 2021)

Electrochemical Characterization of Novel Polyantimonic-Acid-Based Proton Conductors for Low- and Intermediate-Temperature Fuel Cells

  • Olga Yu. Kurapova,
  • Pedro M. Faia,
  • Artem A. Zaripov,
  • Vasily V. Pazheltsev,
  • Artem A. Glukharev,
  • Vladimir G. Konakov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app112411877
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 24
p. 11877

Abstract

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The development of novel proton-conducting membrane materials for electrochemical power units, i.e., low temperature fuel cells (FCs), efficiently working up to 300 °C, is a critical problem related to the rapid shift to hydrogen energy. Polyantimonic acid (PAA) is characterized by high conductivity, sufficient thermal stability and can be regarded as a prospective proton-conducting material. However, the fabrication of bulk PAA-based membranes with high proton conductivity remains a challenging task. In the present work, for the first time, the authors report the investigation on proton conductivity of bulk PAA-based membranes in the temperature range 25–250 °C, both in dry air and in moisturized air. Using PAA powder and fluoroplastic as a binder, fully dense cylindrical membranes were formed by cold uniaxial pressing. The structures of the PAA-based membranes were investigated by SEM, EDX, XRD and Raman techniques. STA coupled with in situ thermo-XRD analysis revealed that the obtained membranes corresponded with Sb2O5·3H2O with pyrochlore structure, and that no phase transitions took place up to 330 °C. PAA-based membranes possess a high-grain component of conductivity, 5 × 10−2 S/cm. Grain boundary conductivities of 90PAA and 80PAA membranes increase with relative humidity content and their values change non-linearly in the range 25–250 °C.

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