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Catalysts in SOFC. Use of Raney Nickel in Infiltration at Anode. Advisors: Professors Trumble and Slamovich. How SOFC Works. Anode Reactions : H 2 2H+ + 2e - 2H + + O 2 - ion H 2 0. Cathode Reaction : ½ O 2 + 2e - O 2 - ion. Reaction Products :
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Catalysts in SOFC Use of Raney Nickel in Infiltration at Anode Advisors: Professors Trumble and Slamovich
How SOFC Works Anode Reactions: H2 2H+ + 2e- 2H+ + O2- ion H20 Cathode Reaction: ½ O2 + 2e- O2- ion Reaction Products: (H20, CO2, H2, CO, etc.) and Heat
Catalysts at the Anode • Background research done with Pt, but too expensive • Current catalyst is Nickel • Compare $8000 per ton of Ni vs. $8000 per pound of Pt • Suggesting Raney Nickel infiltration as an alternative to current process • Raney Nickel is a form of nickel that can be spread in very fine dispersion, which makes it a more effective catalyst
Why Raney Nickel? Cosintering and reduction (Current) Ni Heated to 1400˚C in a reducing atmosphere NiO NiO ZrO2 ZrO2 Ry-Ni Ni/Al alloy Leached in caustic solution Infiltration with Ry-Ni and leaching (Suggested)
Experimental Approach • Casting the Aluminum Nickel alloy • Characterization • Sintering the YSZ preform • The infiltration experiment • Analysis • Leaching
Making the Alloy • Mixed 48 wt% Nickel with 52% Aluminum to make approximately a 1:1 ratio alloy of Al3Ni and Al3Ni2 • Melted Aluminum first at 660˚C • Added Nickel which created an exothermic reaction that grew ‘white hot’ • Cast melt in steel mold
Phase Diagram Courtesy of M.F. Singleton, J.L. Murray, and P. Nash, 1990
Alloy Characterization (Al)+Al3Ni (eutectic) porosity Al3Ni Al3Ni2
X-Ray Diffraction ~50% Al3Ni, 50%Al3Ni2
Making the Preform • Started with Zirconia granules of approximately 25-50 µm • Sintered at 1400˚C for 4 hours with ramps of 300˚C per hour • Shrinkage occurred due to high temperature • Concerns with intragranular porosity 200 µm
Infiltration Set up Cooling Apparatus Crucible Cast Alloy Alumina Beads TungstenShields YSZ Preform Cooling Apparatus Heating Element
Infiltration Process • Ramped the furnace at approximately 50˚C per minute to 1350˚C under vacuum • Held the sample at 1350˚ for 5 minutes then applied 1 atmosphere pressure of 5% Hydrogen/Argon gas • Kept under pressure upon cooling • Cooled at a high rate to minimize oxidation reaction
Infiltration Results • It worked!! • It did not infiltrate the YSZ disk fully • Redox reaction prevention appears to have worked well • Unanalyzed metallic impurities more plentiful in infiltrated disk Crucible Melted Ni/Al alloy Alumina Beads Infiltrated Zirconia
Infiltration Analysis • Infiltration occurred in individual granules • Chemical reaction occurred on the surface • High porosity even before leaching • Mostly due to metal shrinkage
Sem Images SEM Photograph at 500x
Leaching (metal) 25 Seconds 45 Seconds 5 Seconds 25 Seconds 45 Seconds 5 Seconds Used 10% NaOH solution at 50˚C when leaching
Leaching (infiltrated Ysz) 25 Seconds 45 Seconds 5 Seconds 25 Seconds 45 Seconds 5 Seconds Used 10% NaOH solution at 50˚C when leaching
Overall analysis • Infiltration on a macro and micro scale • Surface corrosion of granules shows how infiltration occurred • Impurities found in metal ceramic matrix • Further Research is expected • Visibly equal metal/ceramic matrix • High porosity
Future work • More analysis of the infiltration product • Use SEM images to determine what occurred during infiltration • Use chemical analysis and XRD to analyze impurities and infiltration products • Infiltrate preform with Ni/Al alloys of different compositions and process data • Use Raney Nickel in co-sintering processes • Use SEM to determine structure’s porosity • Test different compositions of Ni/Al alloy at different temperatures
Acknowledgements • Professor Trumble and Professor Slamovich • Patti Metcalf • Brad Allison • Dave Roberts • Jeffrey Redding • NSF Grant (DMR-9912195)
Questions? Thank you.