Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

One-dimensional manganese oxide nanostructures as radical scavenger to improve membrane electrolyte assembly durability of proton exchange membrane fuel cells

Journal of Power Sources(2013)

Cited 21|Views12
No score
Abstract
One-dimensional manganese oxide (MnO2) scavengers are proposed to minimize the radical degradation of membrane electrode assembly (MEA) in fuel cells. The synthesized MnO2 nanotubes and MnO2 nanowires are ca. 5–8 nm in diameter and more than 100 nm in length, respectively. Water retention of the hydrophilic MnO2 reduces the humidity sensitivity of the fuel cells. At 75 RH% humidify levels of inlet gas at 60 °C, single cells assembled by catalyst layer with MnO2 nanotubes and nanowires as the cathodes have peak power densities of 599.3 and 536.8 mW cm−2, respectively. Radical scavenger MnO2 in the cathode catalyst is effective in minimizing the radical degradation in proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells. After the OCV degradation, the hydrogen crossover of cell assembled by catalyst layer with MnO2 nanowires or MnO2 nanotubes in anode and traditional catalyst layer in cathode are about 5.3 and 4.9 mA cm−2, respectively. As a comparison, single cell with conventional catalyst layer in both anode and cathode, the hydrogen crossover through the MEA is increased to 14.7 mA cm−2.
More
Translated text
Key words
Manganese oxide,Nanowires,Nanotubes,Proton exchange membrane fuel cell,Radical degradation
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined