Abstract

Efforts for increasing the share of renewable power generation are dramatically boosted since electrical power from fossil fuels has been used as weapon [1]. Therefore, efficient conversion systems are of great importance to conserve most of the delivered power by nature. High-temperature electrolysis is such an efficient type of energy conversion system compared to similar technologies [2-4]. To bridge the gap to an industrial scale application, the electrochemical and chemical processes have to be understood in detail which is enlightened by some publications from our group [5-8]. In this contribution, a multiphysics model for three types of electrolysis processes (steam, CO2 and co-electrolysis) is presented and evaluated. Relevant parameters like the exchange current density or the anodic / cathodic transfer coefficient including parameter variations for the inlet gas stream, flow rate of the gas, temperature and applied current are investigated. For the microscale properties in the functional layer, Focused Ion Beam Scanning Electron Microscopy (FIB-SEM) is used with the “Slice and View” technique [9,10]. Extracting information like the Triple Phase Boundary Length (TPBL), the fraction of electronic and ionic phase in mixed ionic-electronic conducting (MIEC) materials or the porosity and tortuosity of the (La,Sr)CoO3-δ (LSC) air electrode and the Ni / 8 mol% yttria stabilized zirconia (Ni-8YSZ) fuel electrode help in enhancing the modeling quality of high-temperature SOC model. A conversion from the TPBL (s. Figure 1) to an active area to volume ratio for the computation is needed.Calculated iV-characteristics and experimental curves are compared and serve as a validation for (I,V) data points at higher currents. Depending on the degree of agreement, the (missing) main contributions to loss mechanisms can be identified and initiate a feedback loop for material optimization. Sensitivity analyses are carried out for parameters that are difficult to vary in experiments (e.g. porosity). Porosity and tortuosity parametrize the porous structure for a homogeneously distributed property assumption across the material layers. The ratio between electronic and ionic phase fine-tunes the positioning of iV-characteristics within the potential regime of Ohmic and polarization losses. Calculated electrochemical impedance spectra (EIS) enhance the insight into the theoretical system and may be compared to experimental spectroscopy data via Equivalent Circuit Models (ECM). Calculated data from the model are acquired as in the used experimental setup. As an example, calculated EIS data from steam electrolysis show good agreement with a R-(RQ)4 ECM which as well describes most of the corresponding experimental data in our group. Effects of degradation are envisioned to be incorporated into the model as well.[1] Hosp, G.; Höltschi, R.; Keusch, N.; Schürpf, T.: https://www.nzz.ch/wirtschaft/rohstoffe-als-waffen-die-neusten-entwicklungen-ld.1681268 (28th October 2022, 2.13 pm)[2] Foit, S.R.; Dittrich, L.; Duyster, T.; Vinke, I.; Eichel, R.-A.; de Haart, L.G.J. (2020): Direct Solid Oxide Electrolysis of Carbon Dioxide: Analysis of Performance and Processes. In: Processes 8 (11), 1390[3] Foit, S.R.; Vinke, I.C.; de Haart, L.G.J.; Eichel, R.-A. (2017): Power-to-Syngas: An Enabling Technology for the Transition of the Energy System? In: Angew. Chem. Int. Edit. 56 (20), 5402–5411[4] Tanaka, Y.; Hoerlein, M.P.; Schiller, G. (2016): Numerical simulation of steam electrolysis with a solid oxide cell for proper evaluation of cell performances. In: Int. J. Hydrogen Energ. 41, 752–763[5] Wolf, S.E.; Dittrich, L.; Nohl, M.; Duyster, T.; Vinke, I.C.; Eichel, R.-A.; de Haart, L.G.J. (2022): Boundary Investigation of High-Temperature Co-Electrolysis Towards Direct CO2 Electrolysis. In: J. Electrochem. Soc. 169, 034531[6] Unachukwu, I.D.; Vibhu, V.; Vinke, I.C.; Eichel, R.-A.; de Haart, L.G.J. (2022): Sr Substituted La2-xSrxNi0.8Co0.2O4+ d (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.8): Impact on Oxygen Stoichiometry and Electrochemical Properties.In: Energies 15, 2136[7] Mebrahtu, C.+; Nohl, M.+; Dittrich, L.; Foit, S.R.; de Haart, L.G.J.; Eichel, R.-A.; Palkovits, R. (2021): Integrated Co-Electrolysis and Syngas Methanation for the Direct Production of Synthetic Natural Gas from CO2 and H2O. In: ChemSusChem 14, 2295 – 2302[8] Dittrich, L.; Nohl, M.; Jaekel, E.E.; Foit, S.R.; de Haart, L.G.J. (Bert), Eichel, R.-A. (2019): High-Temperature Co-Electrolysis: A Versatile Method to Sustainably Produce Tailored Syngas Compositions. In: J. Electrochem. Soc. 166 (13), F971 – F975[9] Wilson, J.R.; Kobsiriphat, W.; Mendoza, R.; Chen, H.; Hiller, J.M.; Miller, D.J.; Thornton, K.; Voorhees, P.W.; Adler, S.B.; Barnett, S.A. (2006): Three-dimensional reconstruction of a solid-oxide fuel-cell anode. In: Nat. Mater. 5, 541–544[10] Gostovic, D.; Smith, J.R.; Kundinger, D.P.; Jones, K.S.; Wachsman, E.D. (2007): Three-Dimensional Reconstruction of Porous LSCF Cathodes. In: Electrochem. Solid St. 10 (12), B214–B217Figure 1: Histogram of the TPBL from a 400 image sample set of a FIB-SEM cut of a Ni-8YSZ electrode. Figure 1

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