FUEL CELL ANODE CONFIGURATION FOR CO TOLERANCE
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to polymer electrolyte fuel cells, and, more particularly, to polymer electrolyte fuel cells suitable for operation with hydrogen reformate from a liquid fuel as a fuel gas. This invention was made with government support under Contract No. W-7405-ENG-36 awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The government has certain rights in the invention. Practical fuel cells based on perfluorinated ionomer membranes (e.g.,
Nation™) use reformed fuel as a primary source for the anode feed material. The reformate, besides hydrogen, may contain trace amounts of carbon monoxide (CO, from a few to hundreds ppm), whose presence is detrimental to the cell performance. Energy conversion in fuel cells typically depends on highly dispersed carbon-supported Pt , which catalyzes hydrogen electro-oxidation.
However, CO strongly adsorbs on the Pt surface leading to a decrease of the Pt active surface area available for hydrogen oxidation, and, consequently, to losses in electrical current that are unacceptable for a practical device.
There have been various approaches attempting to achieve full CO tolerance in fuel cell performance. Full tolerance is typically defined as voltage losses no greater than 5% at any cell current in the presence of CO relative to that in its absence. For instance, binary or ternary Pt alloy-based catalysts have been tested. The other alloy metals act as promoters of CO electro-oxidation and stripping. However, not even the best known of these catalysts, such as Pt-Ru alloys, are able to totally eliminate the detrimental effects of higher trace CO concentrations (>100 ppm) at 80 °C.
A second direction has been to increase the cell operating temperature above 100 °C. In proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells, this approach has been successful only for relatively short periods of time. At 120 °C, the sticking of CO onto Pt decreases enough to maintain the hydrogen electro-oxidation rate without significant losses. But higher operating temperatures bring additional problems to ordinary PEM fuel cell, such as catalyst layer instability and ionomer membrane dehydration. These effects cause relatively rapid deterioration of the cell performance.
A third approach is to bleed a small amount of air into the anode along with the fuel stream as described in U.S. Patent 4,910,099, issued May 20, 1990, to Gottesfeld, incorporated herein by reference. Oxygen from the air is able to oxidize the CO adsorbed on the catalyst layer to C02, which is released from the catalyst. The air cleans Pt sites, making them available for H2 electro-oxidation at an acceptable rate. Nevertheless, there are limits on how much air can be permitted into the cell without sacrificing fuel efficiency since oxygen in the air combines with the hydrogen fuel gas. Also, safety becomes an issue because of the potential explosive hazard presented by H2/02 mixtures with increasing amounts of 02. These considerations indicate that injecting the minimum effective amount of air for a given content of CO is the most desirable condition for this approach.
"Electrocatalysis Issues in Polymer Electrolyte Fuel Cells," Wilson et al. ECEC Conference Proceedings, 1.1203-1.1208 (1993), reported difficulties in achieving CO tolerance with "thin-film" catalyst membrane layers with air injection.
Thin film catalyst membrane layers are described in U.S. Patents 5,211 ,984, issued May 18, 1993, and 5,234,777, issued August 10, 1993, both to Wilson and incorporated herein by reference. The membrane catalysts described therein typically have lower Pt loadings on the order of 0.15 mgPt/cm2 in the anode and are prepared so that all catalyst particles are very effectively coated with recast ionomer for incorporation onto a membrane surface. Addition of a Pt-catalyzed carbon paper upstream from the cell (called "pre-filter" in the 1993 paper), provided good CO oxidation activity when oxygen, or air, was added to the hydrogen stream. Such activity was then comparable to that found with commercial ETEK electrodes ('099 Patent) in terms of overall Pt loading and level of air bleed required at given CO impurity level.
The present invention recognizes that the Wilson results suggest that the additional small amount of Pt catalyst that is uncoated by ionomer upstream from the cell provides effective oxidation of CO and, thus, enables effective electrochemical anode activity at the thin-film catalyst that is bonded to the anode side of the membrane. We have recognized that the proper approach is to divide the CO oxidation and hydrogen electrooxidation functions between two components of the anode catalyst. One component would be devoted to CO
chemical oxidation by 02 and the other to electrooxidation of hydrogen on an anode catalyst "free of CO contamination threats".
Implementing such an approach effectively is a sensitive function of the composition of the fuel feed stream and the other important requirements of PEM fuel cell stack and system technology. Such requirements would typically be to achieve complete removal of CO at the highest possible CO level in an otherwise realistic fuel stream composition. In addition, this would be achieved with minimum air bleed levels, to avoid excessive fuel loss, and with the lowest possible overall Pt loadings to achieve the demanding cost targets and at an operating temperature of 80 °C or less.
U.S. Patent 5,482,680, issued January 9, 1996, to Wilkinson et al., generally describes the application of a "selective oxidizer" to oxidize CO in a reformate fuel stream upstream from the fuel cell anode. In one embodiment shown in Figure 15, Wilkinson teaches a selective oxidizing catalyst layer disposed on the surface of the anode facing away from the electrolyte membrane.
The anode is formed of porous electrically conductive sheet material with a layer of electrocatalyst disposed on the surface facing the membrane. The only oxidation catalyst described by Wilkinson is a mixture of 75% platinum/25% rhodium to oxidize CO present in the fuel stream. There is no teaching about application of such an anode to the catalyzed membrane of the '984 and 777 patents and there are no teachings about how to form the anode structure to avoid excessive fuel loss, provide cost effective catalyst loadings, and provide the removal of CO concentrations typically found in reformate fuel streams.
It should be realized that significantly higher challenges are presented by the type of anode feed described and the high fuel utilization demanded herein vs. the description of the" air bleeding technique " of the '099 patent for CO poisoning elimination. Firstly, 100 ppm CO in a gas mixture which is only 40% hydrogen (a typical gasoline reformate fuel stream) is equivalent to 250 ppm of CO in neat hydrogen in terms of the poisoning effect expected. This is because the pressure ratio Pco / Phydrogen determines the CO competition for the catalyst surface . Complete elimination of 250 ppm CO in neat hydrogen, at the desired cell operating temperature of 80°C, has not been demonstrated before. Additionally, two important targets for practical fuel cells are to keep the total Pt
anode loading below 0.5 mg/cm2 (to limit cost ) and to keep the air bleed level below 5% of total anode flow to minimize fuel loss and safety concerns.
The present invention addresses the problem of reducing the level of CO in reformate fuel gas to acceptable levels and novel features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows, and in part will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and attained by means of the instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION To achieve the foregoing and other objects, and in accordance with the purposes of the present invention, as embodied and broadly described herein, the apparatus of this invention may comprise a PEM fuel cell designed to operate in a reformate fuel stream containing diluted hydrogen fuel with CO as an impurity and with added air. A polymer electrolyte membrane has an electrocatalytic surface formed from an electrocatalyst mixed with the polymer and bonded on an anode side of the membrane. An anode is formed of a porous electrically conductive material and has a first surface abutting the layer of the polymer with the first electrocatalyst and a second surface facing away from the membrane. The second surface has a catalyst layer effective to catalyze the oxidation of CO by oxygen present in the fuel stream. The layer of catalyst is formed of a precious metal oxidation catalyst and a hydrophobic material that does not form an ionic conduction path between the layer of catalyst on the second surface and the polymer electrolyte membrane.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and form a part of the specification, illustrate the embodiments of the present invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. In the drawings:
FIGURE 1 is an exploded cross-section of one embodiment of a CO tolerant fuel cell according to the present invention.
FIGURE 2 depicts polarization curves of a fuel cell with a standard anode configuration.
FIGURE 3 depicts polarization curves of a fuel cell with a reconfigured anode. FIGURE 4 depicts polarization curves of a fuel cell with a second standard anode.
FIGURE 5 depicts polarization curves of a fuel cell with a second reconfigured anode.
FIGURE 6 depicts anode overvoltage curves with a standard anode. FIGURE 7 depicts anode overvoltage curves with a reconfigured anode formed by sputtering Pt the anode backing.
FIGURE 8 depicts anode overvoltage curves with a reconfigured anode formed from a Pt-catalyzed cloth anode.
FIGURE 9 depicts anode overvoltage with the cell shown in FIGURE 8 with a variety of fuel compositions.
FIGURE10 depicts a polarization curve with a reconfigured anode with various fuel compositions.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION In accordance with the present invention, shown in Figure 1 , an anode is based on a catalyzed membrane 14 prepared according to the LANL thin-film catalyst technology described in the '984 and 777 Wilson patents, supra, with an adjacent backing layer Vλ that contains additional catalytic sites for effective CO oxidation. As described by the '984 and 777 Wilson patents, membrane electrode assembly (MEA) 13, 14, 15 is prepared by application of Pt/C, or Pt alloy/C catalyst 13 to one side of ionomeric membrane 14 (anode catalyst ) and a Pt/C catalyst 15 to the other side of membrane 14 (cathode catalyst ). Using the TBA+ form of the recast ionomer for preparation of the catalyst layer and the Na+ form of the membrane allows effective hot-pressing for bonding the catalyst layer to the membrane as described in the Wilson patents. This preparation is important for achieving both high utilization and long term stability for anode catalyst 13. It will be understood that catalyst layers 13 and 15 are not separate structures, as shown in Figure 1 for clarity, but are integral with membrane 14.
Low loadings of catalyst 13 bonded to the anode side of membrane 14 (typically,
0.2 mgPt/cm2 or less) in this way, enable effective operation with 100 ppm CO in reformate in conjunction with the anode structure described below. Reformate fuel gas is input through gas manifold H and air (oxygen) is input through gas manifold 1_9.
Anode backing layer 12 is used to provide the additional component of anode catalyst for effective CO oxidation. Backing layer 12 has the following properties:
* Contains extra Pt catalyst .18 not coated by ionomer, thus making catalyst sites easily available to both CO and 02 molecules in the gas phase.
* Exhibits overall gas transport properties similar to those of ordinary, uncatalyzed backing layers used to date adjacent the catalyzed membrane.
* Exhibits good hydrophobic characteristics to prevent "flooding" of the backing in the presence of the high level of humidification required to achieve high conductivity in anode catalyst layer J_3 (high humidification of the fuel feed stream is required to minimize losses in an anode operating with dilute hydrogen feed streams ).
Backing layer 12, 18 thus produced has a fraction of catalyst which is not active for the electrochemical fuel cell reaction since it is deposited without allowing a continuous ionic conduction path to the rest of catalyst 13 bonded to membrane 14. In this way the CO-contaminated H2, which also contains a small amount of 02 (from air bleeding), will first encounter outer catalyst layer 1_8. Layer 18 will promote the direct chemical oxidation of the CO with 02 , before the fuel stream reaches internal catalyst layer J3 where the electrochemical oxidation of
H2 takes place. In other words, outer layer 18 acts to reduce the CO concentration to levels that will not poison the Pt surface in internal catalyst layer 13.
In an experimental embodiment, E-TEK carbon cloth 12 (300 micrometer thick) was filled on one side only with carbon powder/PTFE paste, followed by sintering at 350°C to yield a 50 micrometer thick layer of PTFE-bonded carbon. An ordinary E-TEK backing layer comprises a carbon cloth filled on both sides with 50 micrometer thick PTFE-bonded carbon powder layers for electrical
conductivity. The one-side-filled E-TEK carbon cloth 12 leaves the other side available for application of a PTFE-bonded Pt/C catalyst. Pt/C catalyst (20 wt%
Pt ) was mixed with PTFE and applied to the second side of the one-side- filled E-
TEK carbon cloth, at a total loading of 0.20-0.25 mgPt/cm2. The final thickness of this catalyst layer 18 (50 micrometer), and concomitant gas transport properties were the same as those of the uncatalyzed PTFE-bonded carbon layer in an uncatalyzed carbon cloth. This configuration therefore achieves the combined required properties of the backing layer, namely a catalyst of high activity for oxidation of CO by oxygen in added air while maintaining the transport properties and hydrophobic characteristics of an ordinary backing.
Three procedures of preparing outer catalyst layer 18 on backing material
12 have been provided: 1) painting a hydrophobic Pt/carbon layer onto the backing. 2) using Pt-sputtered carbon cloth, and 3) using a commercial Pt- catalyzed carbon cloth. These modes are described as follows: Procedure 1 : Pt/C/Teflon catalyst composite layer painted onto the backing:
Typical ink contents: 0.7 g 20% Pt on Vulcan XC-72 (ETEK™), 3.5 ml "Teflon 120" suspension (0.02 g solids/ml water), 0.8 g glycerol, 5 ml isopropanol and, 2.0 ml water. The ink can also be prepared with 30% Pt- Ru alloy on Vulcan XC-72 (ETEK™).
Ink and layer preparations: The mixture was sonicated for 10 minutes and then bar-stirred overnight. The ink was brush painted onto a pre-weighed piece of carbon cloth (ETEK™ uncatalyzed carbon cloth) and let dry in the air for 30 min. Then the catalyst-painted cloth was sintered in the air at 280 °C for 15 minutes. A catalyst layer with good adherence to the cloth is obtained. The "Teflon 120" copolymer in the composite acts as binder and also provides a hydrophobic surface needed for proper water management at the anode during cell operation. Also, heating at 280 °C eliminates water, isopropanol and glycerol, so a typical final composition of the dry layer is 18% Pt, 74% carbon black and 8% "Teflon 120".
Procedure 2: Pt-sputtered carbon cloth: A piece of uncatalyzed carbon cloth (ETEK) was sputtered with an approximately 200 A thick Pt layer,
using conventional sputtering techniques. The corresponding precious metal loading is about 0.05 mg Pt/cm2 .
Procedure 3: Proprietary Pt catalyzed carbon cloth: A proprietary 20%
Pt/carbon carbon cloth was also tested as a backing material (purchased from ETEK™). This backing contains 0.35 mg Pt/cm2 in a surface layer about 50 μm thick and was used as received.
When the cell is put together, the catalyzed side 18 of carbon cloth 12 is positioned adjacent the gas flow channels V\_ and the side with uncatalyzed, PTFE-bonded carbon powder is adjacent the catalyst layer bonded to membrane 14. The former side thus facilitates CO + 02 reactivity whereas the latter side serves to prevent significant accumulation of liquid water ("flooding") near the electrochemically active anode catalyst.
Experimental Cells 1-8 were formed with catalyst (chemical 18 and electrochemical 1J3) distributions as shown in Table A.
TABLE A
The cathode catalyst loading was a Pt catalyst in the range of 0.15-0.20 mg/cm2.
As shown by Figures 2-10, the distribution of catalyst between the membrane (electrocatalyst) and the backing (oxidation catalyst) provides effective operation with CO at concentrations up to the equivalent of 250 ppm CO in neat H2 with only 1 % to 6% by volume of air in the fuel stream and with total catalyst loadings of less than about 0.75 mg/cm2. While both Pt/Ru and Pt catalysts are
shown to be effective, the preferred catalyst is Pt from both performance and lifetime considerations.
Figures 2 and 3 compare the performance of two cells (standard and reconfigured anodes) with equivalent total anode catalyst loading (c.a. 0.6-0.7 mg metals/cm2), fed with various fuel compositions. In both cells the catalyst at the membrane contained carbon-supported Pt-Ru.
Comments 1 : Comparison of Figs. 2 and 3 clearly demonstrates that: a) 100 ppm of CO in the fuel practically ruins the performance in both cells. b) Cell No. 2, with a reconfigured anode, needs only 1 % of air bleeding to recover a performance almost as good as that with neat H2. For cell No.1 even with 10% air bleeding, the recovery is far from complete.
Figures 4 and 5 compare the performance of two cells (standard and reconfigured anodes) with equivalent total anode catalyst loading (c.a. 0.5 mg Pt/cm2 ), fed with various fuel compositions. In both cells the catalyst at the membrane contained carbon supported Pt.
Comments 2: Comparison of Figures. 4 and 5 shows that: a) Like the previous cells, 100 ppm of CO in the neat H2 fuel stream virtually ruins the performance of both cell Nos.4 and 5. b) Cells 3 and 4, whose anodes contained only Pt (either with standard or reconfigured distribution), gave much better overall performance than those cells with Pt-Ru at the internal catalyst layer (Cells 1 and 2). An additional advantage of Pt-only catalysts is the fact that they appear to sustain long term (thousand hours) performance with only minor losses.
Pt-Ru alloys performances decrease somewhat faster. c) With 2% air bleeding cell No.3 with an ordinary anode partially recovered; however the losses were still considerable. d) With 2% air bleeding, cell No. 4 with the reconfigured anode showed practically full performance recovery.
In general with neat H2, catalysts with Pt only at membrane catalyst layer 13 exhibit significantly better overall performances than equivalent loadings of Pt-
Ru alloys. With CO contaminated fuels (e.g. reformate), the alloys are more tolerant. However, with 1 to 2% air bleeding the advantage goes back to Pt-only catalysts.
In summary, reconfigured anodes with Pt catalysts used with air bleeding for CO tolerance clearly show superior performance over (a) anodes with PtRu catalysts with or without air bleed, and, (b) over ordinary anode structures with the same total Pt loading. Pt-sputtered backings (procedure 2) as reconfigured anodes also showed enhanced CO tolerance when compared to standard anodes with equal catalysis loadings.
A different way to present the results is to calculate from polarization curves the difference between the cell voltage ( at a given current density) obtained with neat H2 and that with any other fuel gas mixture. This difference is known as "anode excess overvoltage", because it is a voltage loss originating at the anode due to the presence of CO. The smaller the excess overvoltage the better the tolerance to CO.
Figures 6 and 7 compare CO tolerance of a standard anode cell with a cell whose anode backing contained a Pt-sputtered carbon cloth (Procedure 2).
Again, total catalyst loadings are practically the same for the ordinary and reconfigured anodes.
Comments 3: Cell No.6 (reconfigured anode) showed tolerance to 100 ppm CO with 6% air bleed. The standard cell No.5 (with an equivalent anode catalyst loading) was not tolerant to this amount of CO even with 14 % air bleeding.
Reconfigured anodes including commercial Pt-catalyzed backings
(procedure 3) were also tested for CO tolerance with air bleeding. The results are shown in Figure 8. Comments 4: Figure 8 shows that Cell No.7 with a reconfigured anode was fully tolerant (no overvoltage) to 100 ppm CO with 6% air. This result can be compared to that of cell No.1 (Figure 2), which also has a Pt-Ru catalyst bonded to the anode side of the membrane, where even with 10% air the anode overvoltages generated by the CO presence in the fuel are very large. Notice again that the anode total precious metal loadings in both of these cells are very similar.
Reformate fuel feeds may contain a large amount of carbon dioxide
(typically 25%). Reconfigured anodes were tested with air bleed to determine if
the presence of C02 may have some negative effect on cell performance. The results are shown in Figure 9.
Comments 5: As shown by the lower curve in Figure 9, the presence of
25% of C02 in the anode fuel feed does not have a significant effect on the cell performance. A high concentration of C02 and H2 could favor the inverse of the water-gas shift reaction (CO2+H2 -» CO + H 0 ) and produce enough CO to totally poison the catalyst. The result above shows that, if any CO is formed in this way, it is completely and effectively oxidized in the reconfigured anode by the air bleed. The cell also showed tolerance to 100 ppm of CO added to the C02 + H2 mixture, with 6% air bleeding.
Figure 10 shows polarization curves of a cell operating with a simulated reformate fuel containing 40% H2, 35% N2, 25% C02 and 100 ppm CO. The reformate mixture was prepared from pure gases. Comments 6 : Fig. 10 shows the performance of cell No. 8 with a reconfigured anode operating on reformate fuel containing 100 ppm CO. With this reformate mixture the cell performance is poor. However, it almost fully recovers if 2% air is bled in the fuel stream. With 4% air the performance is as good as with neat H2. The full effectiveness of the reconfigured anode is reflected by Figure 10, because the hydrogen feed stream is very diluted (40%).
The result of such dilution is that high anode backing transport properties have to be achieved and, at the same time, the 100 ppm CO-equivalent in poisoning effect to 250 ppm in neat H2--have to be effectively oxidized by air bleed at low overall catalyst loading. It is the effective distribution of Pt catalyst in the reconfigured anode and the way the backing layer is minimally perturbed by the portion of Pt acting as CO oxidation catalyst, that provide the desirable combination of (a) minimal effects of hydrogen dilution and (b) highly effective removal of CO at low levels of air bleed with low catalyst loadings.
Notice that cell No. 8 contains a Pt-Ru alloy as the catalyst in the anode backing. This result shows that Pt-Ru based catalysts at the anode backing are also effective in enhancing CO tolerance with air bleeding.
The foregoing description of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description and is not intended to be exhaustive or to
limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto.