Investigation of the direct methane oxidation over Sm-doped ceria for application in SOFC system
ORAL
Abstract
One of the key advantages of solid oxide fuel cells is that they can use hydrocarbon fuels, and CeO2-δ (ceria)-based oxides play an important role in hydrocarbon activation and carbon coking inhibition. However, even for the simplest hydrocarbon molecule, CH4, the mechanism of electrochemical oxidation on the ceria surface remains largely unknown. This is due to the complex architecture of typical metal/oxide composite electrodes and the heterogeneity of electrode reactions involving multiple chemical/electrochemical steps. Here, we present a Sm-doped ceria thin-film model electrochemical cell capable of selectively monitoring CH4 direct-oxidation on the ceria surface. Combined impedance spectroscopy, in operando X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and DFT calculations reveal that the ceria surface catalyzes the C-H cleavage and that the overall electrode reaction rate is dominantly determined by the H2O formation step. These observations end the longstanding academic debate over the direct use of CH4 and provide an ideal electrode design for high-performance fuel cells.
*This work used Anvil at Texas Advanced Computing Center allocation CHE190010 from the Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Coordination Ecosystem: Services & Support (ACCESS) program, which is supported by National Science Foundation grants #2138259, #2138286, #2138307, #2137603, and #2138296.
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Presenters
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Hyunwoo Ha
- University of Texas at Austin