A nanostructured ceramic fuel electrode for efficient CO2/H2O electrolysis without safe gas†
Abstract
There is increasing interest in converting CO2/H2O to syngas via solid oxide electrolysis cells (SOECs) driven by renewable and nuclear energies. The electrolysis reaction is usually conducted through Ni–YSZ (yttria stabilized zirconia) cermets, state-of-the-art fuel electrodes for SOECs. However, one obvious problem for practical applications is the usage of CO/H2 safe gas, which must be supplied to maintain the electrode performance. This work reports a safe gas free ceramic electrode for efficient CO2/H2O electrolysis. The electrode has a heterogeneously porous structure with Sr2Fe1.5Mo0.5O6−δ (SFM) electrocatalyst nanoparticles deposited onto the inner surface of the YSZ scaffold fabricated by a modified phase-inversion tape-casting method. The nanostructured SFM–YSZ electrodes have demonstrated excellent performance for CO2–H2O electrolysis. For example, the electrode polarization resistance is 0.25 Ω cm2 under open circuit conditions while the current density is 1.1 A cm−2 at 1.5 V for dry CO2 electrolysis at 800 °C. The performance is comparable with those reported for the Ni–YSZ fuel electrodes, where safe gas must be supplied. In addition, the performance is up to one order of magnitude better than those reported for other ceramic electrodes such as La0.75Sr0.25Cr0.5Mn0.5O3−δ and La0.2Sr0.8TiO3+δ. Furthermore, the electrode exhibits good stability in the short-term test at 1.3 V for CO2-20 vol% H2O co-electrolysis, which produces a syngas with a H2/CO ratio close to 2. The reduced interfacial polarization resistance, high current density, and good stability show that the nanostructured SFM–YSZ fuel electrode is highly effective for CO2/H2O electrolysis without using the safe gas, which is critical for practical applications.