February 28, 2011
Journal Article

Mitigation of Sulfur Poisoning of Ni/Zirconia SOFC Anodes by Antimony and Tin

Abstract

Surface Ni/Sb and Ni/Sb alloys were found to efficiently minimize the negative effects of sulfur on the performance of Ni/zirconia anode-supported solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC). Prior to operating on fuel gas containing low concentrations of H2S, the nickel/zirconia anodes were briefly exposed to antimony or tin vapor, which only slightly affected the SOFC performance. During the subsequent exposures to 1 and 5 ppm H2S, increases in anodic polarization losses were minimal compared to those observed for the standard nickel/zirconia anodes. Post-test XPS analyses showed that Sb and Sn tended to segregate to the surface of Ni particles, and further confirmed a significant reduction of adsorbed sulfur on the Ni surface in Ni/Sn and Ni/Sb samples compared to the Ni. The effect may be the result of weaker sulfur adsorption on bimetallic surfaces, adsorption site competition between sulfur and Sb or Sn on Ni, or other factors. The use of dilute binary alloys of Ni-Sb or Ni-Sn in the place of Ni, or brief exposure to Sb or Sn vapor, may be effective means to counteract the effects of sulfur poisoning in SOFC anodes and Ni catalysts. Other advantages, including suppression of coking or tailoring the anode composition for the internal reforming, are also expected.

Revised: March 2, 2011 | Published: February 28, 2011

Citation

Marina O.A., C.A. Coyle, M.H. Engelhard, and L.R. Pederson. 2011. Mitigation of Sulfur Poisoning of Ni/Zirconia SOFC Anodes by Antimony and Tin. Journal of the Electrochemical Society 158, no. 4:B424-B429. PNNL-SA-76341.