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  4. In situ Reduction and Oxidation of Nickel from Solid Oxide Fuel Cells in a Transmission Electron Microscope
 
research article

In situ Reduction and Oxidation of Nickel from Solid Oxide Fuel Cells in a Transmission Electron Microscope

Faes, Antonin  
•
Jeangros, Quentin  
•
Wagner, Jakob B.
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2009
ECS Transactions

Environmental transmission electron microscopy was used to characterize in situ the reduction and oxidation of nickel from a Ni/YSZ solid oxide fuel cell anode support between 300-500°C. The reduction is done under low hydrogen pressure. The reduction initiates at the NiO/YSZ interface, then moves to the center of the NiO grain. At higher temperature the reduction occurs also at the free NiO surface and the NiO/NiO grain boundaries. The growth of Ni is epitaxial on its oxide. Due to high volume decrease, nanopores are formed during reduction. During oxidation, oxide nanocrystallites are formed on the nickel surface. The crystallites fill up the nickel porosity and create an inhomogeneous structure with remaining voids. This change in structure causes the nickel oxide to expand during a RedOx cycle.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1149/1.3205743
Author(s)
Faes, Antonin  
Jeangros, Quentin  
Wagner, Jakob B.
Hansen, Thomas W.
Van herle, Jan  
Brisse, Annabelle
Dunin-Borkowski, Rafal
Hessler-Wyser, Aïcha  
Date Issued

2009

Published in
ECS Transactions
Volume

25

Issue

2

Start page

1985

End page

1992

Subjects

In situ

•

Environmental TEM

•

RedOx

•

SOFC

•

Ni-YSZ Anode

•

ETEM

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
CIME  
LENI  
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/44598
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