Electrochemically Driven Deactivation and Recovery in PrBaCo2 O5+δ Oxygen Electrodes for Reversible Solid Oxide Fuel Cells.
Lin ZhuBo WeiZhihong WangKongfa ChenHaiwu ZhangYaohui ZhangXiqiang HuangZhe LüPublished in: ChemSusChem (2016)
The understanding of surface chemistry changes on oxygen electrodes is critical for the development of reversible solid oxide fuel cell (RSOFC). Here, we report for the first time that the electrochemical potentials can drastically affect the surface composition and hence the electrochemical activity and stability of PrBaCo2 O5+δ (PBCO) electrodes. Anodic polarization degrades the activity of the PBCO electrode, whereas the cathodic bias could recover its performance. Alternating anodic/cathodic polarization for 180 h confirms this behavior. Microstructure and chemical analysis clearly show that anodic bias leads to the accumulation and segregation of insulating nanosized BaO on the electrode surface, whereas cathodic polarization depletes the surface species. Therefore, a mechanism based on the segregation and incorporation of BaO species under electrochemical potentials is considered to be responsible for the observed deactivation and recovery process, respectively.