Abstract
Recent developments in hydrocarbon-based proton exchange membrane fuel cells have significantly narrowed the performance gap compared to state-of-the-art cells using perfluorosulfonic acid ionomers (PFSA). However, balancing protonic resistance and gas transport resistance in the catalyst layer remains a challenge at low humidity. This study investigates gas transport resistance and its components in sulfonated phenylated polyphenylene-based catalyst layers using various limiting current methods. Results show that increasing the dry ionomer to carbon (I/C) ratio from 0.2 to 0.4, a measure to catch up with protonic resistance of PFSA-based catalyst layers, significantly increases gas transport resistance in the cathode catalyst layer by 28 %. The data suggest a strong correlation between local gas transport resistance and IEC. A high IEC is beneficial for the gas transport through the ionomer film. However, at low ionomer volume fractions the local gas transport resistance is dominated by the I/C independent interfacial resistance. Furthermore, a low IEC hydrocarbon ionomer, such as Pemion ® PP1-HNN4–00-X (IEC = 2.5 meq g −1 ), not only exhibits a beneficial interfacial resistance, but also suppresses excessive ionomer swelling, which typically occurs during operating conditions where liquid water is forming.
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CITATION STYLE
Liepold, H., Nguyen, H., Heizmann, P. A., Klose, C., Vierrath, S., & Münchinger, A. (2024). Gas Transport Resistance of Hydrocarbon-Based Catalyst Layers in Proton-Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells. Journal of The Electrochemical Society, 171(5), 054509. https://doi.org/10.1149/1945-7111/ad44db
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