TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of water management in membrane and cathode catalyst layers on suppressing the performance hysteresis phenomenon in anion-exchange membrane fuel cells
AU - Otsuji, Kanji
AU - Shirase, Yuto
AU - Asakawa, Takayuki
AU - Yokota, Naoki
AU - Nagase, Katsuya
AU - Xu, Weilin
AU - Song, Ping
AU - Wang, Shuanjin
AU - Tryk, Donald A.
AU - Kakinuma, Katsuyoshi
AU - Inukai, Junji
AU - Miyatake, Kenji
AU - Uchida, Makoto
N1 - Funding Information:
This project was partly supported by the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) Japan through funds for the “Advanced Research Program for Energy and Environmental Technologies,” by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) and the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) under the Joint Research Projects (JRPs) program, and by the Japan Science and Technology (JST) through Strategic International Collaborative Research Program (SICORP).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors
PY - 2022/2/28
Y1 - 2022/2/28
N2 - Anion exchange membrane fuel cells (AEMFCs) are vulnerable to water management problems, since water is produced at the anode and consumed at the cathode. Previously we found severe voltage losses when increasing the current density in an AEMFC with a commercial Fe–N–C cathode catalyst. In the present work, we have clearly identified the problem as being related to water management and developed two approaches to alleviating the problem: by use of a thin hydrophilized membrane, the diffusivity of water at the surface was improved, and the severe I–V hysteresis was suppressed, despite the cell using an Fe–N–C cathode catalyst with a high water absorption rate. The voltage loss was also alleviated by the use of a recently developed Fe–N–C catalyst with higher hydrophobicity, which decreased the absorption of back-diffusing water into the catalyst layer and increased the amount of water supplied to the reaction sites These improvements have demonstrated that water transport is the main limitation for the previously reported hysteresis and provide strategies to achieve higher performance AEMFCs through proper water management and formation of water transport pathways.
AB - Anion exchange membrane fuel cells (AEMFCs) are vulnerable to water management problems, since water is produced at the anode and consumed at the cathode. Previously we found severe voltage losses when increasing the current density in an AEMFC with a commercial Fe–N–C cathode catalyst. In the present work, we have clearly identified the problem as being related to water management and developed two approaches to alleviating the problem: by use of a thin hydrophilized membrane, the diffusivity of water at the surface was improved, and the severe I–V hysteresis was suppressed, despite the cell using an Fe–N–C cathode catalyst with a high water absorption rate. The voltage loss was also alleviated by the use of a recently developed Fe–N–C catalyst with higher hydrophobicity, which decreased the absorption of back-diffusing water into the catalyst layer and increased the amount of water supplied to the reaction sites These improvements have demonstrated that water transport is the main limitation for the previously reported hysteresis and provide strategies to achieve higher performance AEMFCs through proper water management and formation of water transport pathways.
KW - Anion exchange membrane fuel cell
KW - Catalyst layer morphology
KW - Membrane morphology
KW - Performance hysteresis
KW - Platinum free cathode
KW - Water management
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2022.230997
DO - 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2022.230997
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85122926024
SN - 0378-7753
VL - 522
JO - Journal of Power Sources
JF - Journal of Power Sources
M1 - 230997
ER -