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Two-dimensional electrochemical model for mixed conductors: a study of ceria

Published 18 Mar 2009 in physics.chem-ph | (0903.3250v1)

Abstract: A two-dimensional small bias model has been developed for a patterned metal current collector $|$ mixed oxygen ion and electronic conductor (MIEC) $|$ patterned metal current collector electrochemical cell in a symmetric gas environment. Specifically, we compute the electrochemical potential distributions of oxygen vacancies and electrons in the bulk and near the surface for $\text{Pt} | \text{Sm}{0.15}\text{Ce}{0.85}\text{O}_{1.925} | \text{Pt}$ symmetric cell in a $\text{H}_2-\text{H}_2\text{O}-\text{Ar}$ (reducing) atmosphere from 500 to $650o C$. Using a two-dimensional finite-element model, we show that two types of electronic current exist within the cell: an in-plane drift-diffusion current that flows between the gas $|$ ceria chemical reaction site and the metal current collector, and a cross-plane current that flows between the two metal electrodes on the opposite side of the cell. By fitting the surface reaction constant $\tilde k_f0$ to experimental electrode resistance values while fixing material properties such as bulk ionic and electronic equilibrium defect concentrations and mobilities, we are able to separate the electrode polarization into the surface reaction component and the in-plane electron drift-diffusion component. We show that for mixed conductors with a low electronic conductivity (a function of oxygen partial pressure) or a high surface reaction rate constant, the in-plane electron drift-diffusion resistance can become rate-limiting in the electrode reaction.

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