Journal of Membrane Science, Vol.300, No.1-2, 45-50, 2007
Examination of wet coating and co-sintering technologies for micro-SOFCs fabrication
Preparation conditions to obtain a dense electrolyte layer on a micro-tubular electrode support were investigated using wet coating and subsequent co-firing techniques. An anode-supported micro-tubular SOFC with 1.5 mm diameter was successfully fabricated by careful control of the cosintering process of electrolyte/anode support laminates. The densification of the electrolyte layer deposited on the support surface was greatly affected by the shrinkage of tubular support during the co-sintering process. Support shrinkage above 15% was found to produce a fully densified electrolyte layer on the anode support. In contrast, the use of an anode support with shrinkage below 10% constrained gadolinium-doped ceria (GDC) sintering, resulting in a poorly densified GDC microstructure. Finally, we obtained a micro-tubular cell composed of a dense GDC and a porous (La,Sr)(Co,Fe)O-3-GDC multi-layered structure on a NiO-GDC micro-tubular anode support. The cell, with a dense and approximate to 15 mu m thick GDC electrolyte layer, was electrochemically evaluated in a temperature range from 450 to 550 degrees C. This micro-tubular cell with an electrode length of 6.3 mm showed a power density above 0.1, 0.2 and 0.4 W/cm(2) at 450, 500 and 550 degrees C, respectively, in wet H-2 fuel flow. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords:small SOFC;micro-tubular support;slurry coating;intermediate temperature operation;ceria-based electrolyte