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ECS Meeting Abstracts, 21(MA2014-02), p. 1240-1240, 2014

DOI: 10.1149/ma2014-02/21/1240

The Electrochemical Society, ECS Transactions, 3(64), p. 1049-1057, 2014

DOI: 10.1149/06403.1049ecst

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La2NiO4 Ceramic Electrodes for Hydrogen Peroxide Electroreduction

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Direct borohydride/peroxide fuel cells (DBPFCs) use sodium borohydride (NaBH4) as an anodic fuel and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) as the oxidant. DBPFCs are superior to similar types of fuel cells in terms of their theoretical cell voltage and energy density. Additionally, the fact that both fuel and oxidant reactants are liquid at ambient temperature simplifies their storage, thermal management and internal processing [1]. For these reasons, DBPFCs can be promising alternatives as power sources for space, underwater, and specific terrestrial applications where oxygen is not available. To develop the DBPFC, we are focused on finding low-cost, stable, durable, and efficient electrocatalytic materials for H2O2 reduction that can simultaneously inhibit its decomposition. H2O2 decomposition is known to proceed even on platinum, which is the most commonly used electrocatalyst. Recently, some perovskite-type oxides were found to have reasonable activity for H2O2 electroreduction in DBPFCs [2]. Here, La2NiO4 ceramic disks are prepared by mechanosynthesis and characterized by scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction. The use of ceramic pellets as electrodes allows avoiding cross-contributions of carbon or nickel foam catalyst supports, thus preventing the influence of such effects in the evaluation of La2NiO4 activity. Several electrochemical methods, namely cyclic voltammetry, chronoamperometry and chronopotentiometry, were used to investigate the electrodes activity for H2O2 reduction in alkaline media. These studies made possible determination of the reaction kinetic parameters as well as its coulombic efficiency. The effect of temperature on the calculated number of exchanged electrons and on the charge transfer coefficients was analyzed. Stability tests were also performed. Then, a test laboratory DBPFC was assembled using a La2NiO4 cathode and main cell parameters (e.g., open circuit voltage, peak power density, cell voltage and current density at the peak) were evaluated for temperatures ranging from 25 to 65 ºC. References D.M.F. Santos, C.A.C. Sequeira, Sodium borohydride as a fuel for the future, Renew. Sustain. Energy Rev. 15 (2011) 3980. D.M.F. Santos, T.F.B. Gomes, B. Sljukic, C.A.C. Sequeira, F.M.L. Figueiredo, Electrochemical study of perovskite cathodes for H2O2 reduction in direct borohydride fuel cells (in preparation).