Publication: Decay in Mechanical Properties of Catalyst Coated Membranes Subjected to Combined Chemical and Mechanical Membrane Degradation
Type:
Article
Date
2014-11-28
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wily
Abstract
The mechanical stability of catalyst coated membranes
(CCMs) is an important factor for the overall durability and
lifetime of polymer electrolyte fuel cells. In this article, the
evolution of the mechanical properties of degraded CCMs is
comprehensively assessed. A combined chemical and
mechanical accelerated stress test (AST) was applied to simulate field operation and rapidly generate partially degraded
CCM samples for tensile and expansion experiments under
both room and fuel cell conditions. The tensile results indicated significant reductions in ultimate tensile strength,
toughness, and fracture strain as a function of AST cycles,
accompanied by a mild increase in elastic modulus. The
increased brittleness and reduced fracture toughness of the
CCM, caused primarily by chemical membrane degradation,
is expected to play an important role in the ultimate failure of
the fuel cell. The expansion tests revealed a linear decay in
hygrothermal expansion, similar in magnitude to the loss of
mechanical strength. The decline in CCM sensitivity to environmental changes leads to non-uniform swelling and contraction that may exacerbate local degradation. Interestingly,
the hygrothermal expansion in the late stages of degradation
coincided with the fracture strain, which correlates to in situ
development of fractures in chemically weakened membranes.
Description
Keywords
Accelerated Stress Test, Degradation, Durability, Fuel Cell, Mechanical Properties, Membrane
Citation
Yixuan Chen, Yadvinder Singh, Dilip Ramani, Francesco P. Orfino, Monica Dutta, Erik Kjeang, 4D imaging of chemo-mechanical membrane degradation in polymer electrolyte fuel cells - Part 1: Understanding and evading edge failures, Journal of Power Sources, 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2021.230674, 520, (230674), (2022).
