Abstract

The goal of the present study was to quantify degradation phenomena on anodes that can be attributed to chemical (thermal) and/or electrochemical sintering, to find out the underlying mechanisms, and to propose countermeasures. The samples were thermally aged for times from 0 to 1000 h, and additional samples of the same type were subjected to electrochemical loading over the same period. The cells were then examined for microstructural changes using FE-SEM/EDS and micro-computed tomography (µ-CT), and the results are correlated with electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) parameters of long-term electrochemical experiments under dry and humid conditions. It has been shown that it is possible to distinguish between the thermal (chemical) and the electrochemical part of the microstructure degradation. Humidity is an important factor that affects the microstructure in the long term. Tortuosity, porosity, and specific resistance change with time, depending on the humidity of the fuel. Tortuosity changes by one order of magnitude in the direction perpendicular to the electrode surface, while in the other two directions in the plane, the changes are only moderate. Porosity increases in all electrochemically treated samples by 1–5% depending on dry ore humidity conditions and time. As all other experimental parameters are the same in all experiments, the EIS results confirm through the increasing specific resistance, mainly the influence of the changes on the microstructure on the electrochemical properties of the cells.

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