Achieving 5,000-H And 8,000-H Low-Pgm Electrode Durability On Automotive Drive Cycles

JOURNAL OF THE ELECTROCHEMICAL SOCIETY(2021)

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Abstract
Whereas total Pt loading in anode and cathode catalysts below 0.125 mg cm(-2) is required to meet the stringent cost target for automotive fuel cell systems (FCS) for light duty vehicles, low-loaded cathode catalysts are susceptible to unacceptable aging-related performance losses at high current densities. A framework model, validated by accelerated stress test data, has identified cell voltage, relative humidity (RH) and temperature as the key operating variables that affect degradation of a high-activity d-PtCo/C cathode catalyst with 0.1 mg cm(-2) Pt loading. Drive cycle simulations indicate that these can be controlled by properly selecting the minimum FCS power, compressor-expander module (CEM) turndown, and stack coolant temperature. The optimum system parameters are 4-kW(e) minimum power for an 80-kW(e) FCS, CEM turndown of 12.5, and 66 degrees C average coolant exit temperature that combine to limit the maximum cell voltage to 850 mV and outlet RH to 90%-100%. Depending on Pt loading, the mismatch between actual and allowable degradation for 10% power loss over 5,000-h lifetime requires the stack to be oversized by 2.4%-5%, resulting in 8.4%-41% lower Pt utilization and 7.1%-20.5% penalty in stack cost. The corresponding results for 8,000-h lifetime are 10.3%-14% stack oversizing, 23%-51.8% lower Pt utilization, and 24.1%-35.4% stack cost penalty.
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Key words
Durability, Low-PGM Electrode, Automotive Drive Cycles, Performance
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