Open Research will be unavailable from 6pm to 6.30pm on Wednesday 10th December 2025 AEDT due to scheduled maintenance.
 

Improvement of the sputtered platinum utilization in proton exchange membrane fuel cells using plasma-based carbon nanofibres

Date

Authors

Caillard, A.
Charles, Christine
Boswell, Roderick
Brault, Pascal

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Institute of Physics Publishing

Abstract

Proton exchange membrane fuel cells are complex nanostructures containing a catalyst (usually platinum), proton and electron conductors and pores. Their electrode performance is strongly influenced by the size, the repartition and the orientation of the nanoseparated materials used and the pores. This paper investigates the electrical performance achieved by three designs of plasma-prepared Pt/C electrodes with low Pt loadings (from 0.01 to 0.1 mg Pt cm-2). A plasma sputtering process was used for the synthesis of Pt nano-clusters in three different microporous supports: a single oriented layer based on aligned carbon nanofibres (CNFs, custom-made by plasma), a single convoluted layer based on Vulcan carbon particles (LT1600, known as a gas diffusion layer - GDL) or a double layer composed of CNFs covering a GDL. Membrane electrode assemblies (MEAs) were prepared by hot-pressing one of these three electrodes with a commercial electrode (0.5 mgPt cm -2) and a commercial Nafion 115 membrane, and compared with a reference MEA (from Electrochem Inc. with a Pt loading per electrode of 0.5 mgPt cm-2 and a maximum power density of 425 mW cm -2). The cathodic Pt utilization efficiency in the best performing plasma-prepared cathode (based on the double layer GDL/CNF) with a Pt loading of 0.1 mgPt cm-2 is 3.6 times higher than that measured for the commercial cathode (3.1 versus ). On the anode side, the three designs of plasma-prepared electrodes with 0.01 mgPt cm-2 lead to similar MEA performance than a commercial electrode at high backpressure (3 bar). At a lower backpressure, the GDL/CNF electrode is the best performing plasma-prepared anode.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until