Electrochemical investigation of stainless steel corrosion in a proton exchange membrane electrolyzer cell

The lack of a fundamental understanding of the corrosion mechanisms in the electrochemical environments of proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolyzer and/or fuel cells (ECs/FCs) has seriously hindered the improvement of performance and efficiency of PEM ECs/FCs. In this study, a stainless steel mes...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of hydrogen energy 2015-09, Vol.40 (36), p.12506-12511
Hauptverfasser: Mo, Jingke, Steen, Stuart M., Zhang, Feng-Yuan, Toops, Todd J., Brady, Michael P., Green, Johney B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The lack of a fundamental understanding of the corrosion mechanisms in the electrochemical environments of proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolyzer and/or fuel cells (ECs/FCs) has seriously hindered the improvement of performance and efficiency of PEM ECs/FCs. In this study, a stainless steel mesh was purposely used as an anode gas diffusion layer that was intentionally operated with high positive potentials under harsh oxidative environments in a PEMEC to study the corrosion mechanism of metal migration. A significant amount of iron and nickel cations were determined to transport through the anode catalyst layer, the PEM and the cathode catalyst layer during the PEMEC operation. The formation/deposition of iron oxide and nickel oxide on the carbon paper gas diffusion layer at the cathode side is first revealed by both scanning electron microscope and X-ray diffraction. The results indicate the corrosion elements of iron and nickel are transported from anode to cathode through the catalyst-coated membrane, and deposited on carbon fibers as oxides. This phenomenon could also open a new corrosion-based processing approach to potentially fabricate multifunctional oxide structures on carbon fiber devices. This study has demonstrated a new accelerated test method for investigating the corrosion and durability of metallic materials as well. •Fe/Ni deposits on the carbon fibers was observed for the first time (See Figure 2B and C).•A significant amount of Fe/Ni transport through CLs and PEM.•A new accelerated/effective method to investigate corrosion mechanisms.•Potential method to fabricate multifunctional devices with single carbon fiber.
ISSN:0360-3199
1879-3487
DOI:10.1016/j.ijhydene.2015.07.061