Schuler, Josef AndreasSchuler, Albert JosefWuillemin, ZacharieHessler-Wyser, AïchaLudwig, ChristianVan Herle, Jan2011-02-182011-02-182011-02-18201110.1149/1.3570190https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/64557WOS:000300770104001This study aims to quantify in a holistic approach chromium (Cr) contamination in solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) stack testing using adapted tools: i) a hot gas sampling method to analyze volatile Cr species in the air flux at the cathode inlet location; ii) a rapid quantification method for Cr as condensed matter in cathode material of post-test samples. The hot air sampling method reveals itself as a reproducible and time-resolved quantification technique for Cr trace amounts in a gas flow; this technique is seen as a promising evaluation tool for Cr contamination issues in SOFC systems. The quantification method reveals severe Cr-poisoning in a cell. The combined findings indicate that Cr contamination generated by system components located upstream the cell must be suppressed by hindering the access of Cr pollutants to the cathode compartment.enFuel-Cell CathodesMulti-Scale Assessment of Cr Contamination Levels in SOFC Cathode Environmenttext::conference output::conference proceedings::conference paper