The objective of this work is to improve the understanding of the effect of various operating conditions on the combined chemo-mechanical membrane degradation mechanism and associated membrane durability in polymer electrolyte fuel cells. Small-scale fuel cells were subjected to a variable AST with alternating chemical and mechanical stress cycles and 4D in-situ XCT visualization [8]. Firstly, the root cause of mechanical stress dominating chemical stress in the previous work [7] was identified as RH being higher than the set point during the chemical phase due to heat loss, which reduced chemical stresses. Consequently, RH was selected as the target variable in the chemical phase to understand its impact on membrane degradation. Subsequent design mitigations were also made on the test hardware so that the cell temperature could be robustly controlled at elevated temperature to support accurate RH control. Meanwhile, the effects of gas flow rate and wet/dry phase duration during the mechanical RH cycling phase were also studied with the assistance of single frequency electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), which was used to continuously measure high frequency cell resistance (HFR) during RH cycling. Larger HFR swings between wet and dry phases were interpreted to represent larger amplitude of mechanical stress. It was found that reducing the cell RH during the chemical phase and maximizing the HFR swing during the mechanical phase can considerably affect the membrane failure mode and significantly reduce the test lifetime (8 cycles versus 32 cycles) compared to the previous study [7], as indicated in the attached figure. Analysis of selected planar and cross-sectional XCT images indicates that both membrane thinning and cracking were within the field of view investigated at EOL; therefore, the modified AST protocol was more efficient and chemo-mechanically balanced. Again comparing to the published results from Mukundan et al. [11], membrane failure mode in the present work after elevating chemical and mechanical stresses demonstrated combined degradation modes of both pure OCV and pure RH cycling ASTs, where membrane thinning and cracking appeared simultaneously. This result was also more consistent with COCV ASTs done by Lim et al. [9] and Sadeghi et al. [10] using larger scale technical cells. With reduced RH in chemical phase, membrane thinning became more significant. Although the membrane cracks were narrower and fewer in quantity compared to the previous work, they were formed much earlier. Future testing using this more robust and efficient chemo-mechanical degradation AST protocol on selected reinforced membranes is planned.
Keywords: fuel cell; membrane durability; accelerated stress test; mechanical degradation; chemical degradation; X-ray computed tomography
Acknowledgements:
This research was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Canada Foundation for Innovation, British Columbia Knowledge Development Fund, Western Economic Diversification Canada, Ballard Power Systems, and W.L. Gore & Associates. This research was undertaken, in part, thanks to funding from the Canada Research Chairs program.