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Controlled growth of Pr <sub>1.5</sub>Ba <sub>1.5</sub>Cu <sub>3</sub>O <sub>7</sub> cubes to meliorate the cathode reaction for protonic ceramic fuel cells

Junyi Gong, Kunpeng Du, Wang Jiang, Shenhong Qu, Jie Hou

2025Journal of Advanced Ceramics10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Efforts to improve the performance of protonic ceramic fuel cells (PCFCs) have been hampered by the limited availability of cathode materials with high activity and durability. One potential approach to enhance electrocatalytic performance is by modifying the particle morphology of the cathode, which potentially reforms transport properties and active reaction sites. Herein, the configuration of cathode particles via controllable growth of cubes is attempted to ameliorate perovskite-related PBC (Pr<sub>1.5</sub>Ba<sub>1.5</sub>Cu<sub>3</sub>O<sub>7</sub>). The PBC particle geometry changes to cube when switching the calcination temperature from 900 to 950 ℃, exposing {100} crystal facets on surface. This gives rise to more surface oxygen vacancies and efficient Cu<sup>2+</sup>-O-Cu<sup>3+</sup> electron-hopping transition paths, favoring high electrocatalytic activity with expeditious oxygen adsorption/activation, and facilitating the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) process. The particle-cubic PBC cathode assembled at 950 ℃ (PBC-950) exhibits significantly enhanced performance with a power output of 1982 mW cm<sup>-2</sup> and a polarization resistance of 0.028 Ω cm<sup>2</sup> at 700 °C on a PCFC, outperforming other Co-based and Cu-based single-phase cathodes in the literature. On balance, the superior power and polarization performance, along with excellent durability over 200 h, suggest that PBC-950 is a promising alternative for PCFC cathodes. This study demonstrates the potential of controlling particle growth to design highly-active electrodes with specialized properties, opening new avenues for material design in PCFCs and related electrocatalytic fields.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceCeramicCathodeStructural materialFuel cellsChemical engineeringNuclear chemistryMetallurgyChemistryPhysical chemistryEngineeringAdvancements in Solid Oxide Fuel CellsFuel Cells and Related MaterialsElectrocatalysts for Energy Conversion