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    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    The Electrochemical Society ; 2022
    In:  ECS Meeting Abstracts Vol. MA2022-02, No. 43 ( 2022-10-09), p. 1627-1627
    In: ECS Meeting Abstracts, The Electrochemical Society, Vol. MA2022-02, No. 43 ( 2022-10-09), p. 1627-1627
    Abstract: From the development of anion exchange membrane fuel cells it is known that airborne CO 2 is easily absorbed in this type of membranes and has a detrimental effect on the conductivity of the membrane 1 . It was also found, however, that at sufficiently high current densities carbonate and hydrogen carbonate ions are flushed out of the membrane and ion conduction occurs predominantly via hydroxyl ions 1 . This behavior led to the idea of using AEM based cells for gas separation for two different type of applications. So, during the first waves of COVID-19 medical oxygen became a scarce resource. Local production of oxygen by separation from air is an interesting approach to overcome this issue. This should be feasible using an anion exchange membrane cell with an air side oxygen reduction electrode and an oxygen evolution electrode. The hope is that in combination of these two reactions the required cell voltage can be kept much below typical water electrolysis voltages so that operation with simple PV cells or modules is possible. At the same time the question is if current densities can be achieved at which the OH - transport and thus the anodic release of O 2 dominates, as an enrichment of CO 2 must be avoided for this application. On the opposite there are worries about the effect of increasing CO 2 concentration in occupied confined rooms like vehicles. Here a device that removes CO 2 from air without consuming much oxygen is desirable. The removal of CO 2 from the air supply to AEM fuel cells by an additional cell placed upstream of the cathode inlet and downstream of the anode outlet was demonstrated by Matz at al. 2 . As for CO 2 separation only, no hydrogen is available for the anode reaction here again the operation against an oxygen evolution electrode is required, optimized, however, towards the CO 2 transport minimizing O 2 transport. In this study for one type of AEM membrane and ionomer, namely Fumapem FAA3 and Fumion (both Fumatech BWT, Germany) the effect of different cathode electrodes and electrode materials as well as the effect of operation conditions towards the selectivity of oxygen or CO 2 transport were investigated. For that purpose, test set-ups were used were the cathode side was supplied with synthetic air, compressed air or synthetic air with added CO 2 and the anode side with an inert gas N 2 or helium. Nass spectrometry and dedicated CO 2 concentration sensors were used to determine the anodic release of O 2 and CO 2 as well as the reduction of O 2 and CO 2 concentrations on the cathode side. First measurements of the oxygen transfer using a cell with a silver cathode (Oxag, Gaskatel, Germany) and a nickel foam anode (Gaskatel, Germany) it was found that the oxygen transfer had a promising faradaic efficiency exceeding 80% (cf. Fig. 1). The cell voltage of 1.5 V at 90 mA cm -2 was however still too high for the application. Replacing the Oxag silver electrode by an industrial ORR electrode for alkaline cells did not yield an improvement (cf. fig 2). Increasing humidification to 100 % r.H. improved the current density (cf. Fig 3). Using high humidification conditions, the CO 2 effect was studied by switching from synthetic air to pressured air and back and 160 mA cm -2 . A rapid increase of the anodic CO 2 concentration to values exceeding 2000 ppm was observed (cf. Fig. 4). Comparing CO 2 transfer for cells with Oxag cathode and the commercial ORR cathode again showed that the latter would not improve the situation. It proves however, that the CO 2 transfer rate can be influenced by the cathode catalyst. Regarding the CO 2 separation test with synthetic air with added 3.85 Vol% of CO 2 as cathode feed have shown that under such conditions, mainly CO 2 is transported (cf. Fig. 5). In total it will be shown that CO 2 separation with state-of-the-art materials is already possible. The use of O 2 separation regarding onside production of medical O 2 today fails due to still too high CO 2 selectivity. The fact that CO 2 selectivity seems to be dependent on the cathode catalyst may allow further optimization also valuable for AEMFC fuel cell developments. Acknowledgment: The work received financial support in parts from the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft by the Demo-medVer project part project e 3 C-O 2 as part of the Fraunhofer cs. Corona program. M. Inaba, Y. Matsui, M. Saito, A. Tasaka, K. Fukuta, S. Watanabe and H. Yanagi, Electrochemistry, 79, 322–325 (2011). 2. S. Matz, B. Setzler, C. M. Weiss, L. Shi, S. Gottesfeld and Y. Yan, Meet. Abstr., MA2020-02 (34), 2227 (2020). Figure 1
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2151-2043
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: The Electrochemical Society
    Publication Date: 2022
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2438749-6
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