Clear evidence was obtained by dilatation and density measurements that the amount of lithium carbonate in the starting mixture sensibly affects the sintering behaviour of mixed lithium-nickel oxide cathodes. Porosimetric, diffractometric and microscopic measurements were then performed to understand and put on a quantitative basis such an influence. It is shown that, when the sintering temperature is low enough to prevent lithium oxide loss from the mixed oxide, cathodes total porosity increases with increasing lithium content up to a limiting composition beyond which a porosity decrease takes place. Lithium oxide loss, on the other hand, leads to a total porosity decrease which is related both to the initial lithium content and to the amount of the lithium oxide lost. Such a behaviour can be explained on the basis of the different mechanism by which the mixed oxide is obtained depending on the relative amounts of nickel and lithium carbonate in the starting mixture. Moreover it is shown that the observed total porosity changes are mainly a consequence of microporosity changes.

On the role of lithium carbonate in the preparation of doped nickel oxide cathodes for molten carbonate fuel cells

MASSAROTTI, VINCENZO;MARINI, AMEDEO;BERBENNI, VITTORIO;CAPSONI, DORETTA
1990-01-01

Abstract

Clear evidence was obtained by dilatation and density measurements that the amount of lithium carbonate in the starting mixture sensibly affects the sintering behaviour of mixed lithium-nickel oxide cathodes. Porosimetric, diffractometric and microscopic measurements were then performed to understand and put on a quantitative basis such an influence. It is shown that, when the sintering temperature is low enough to prevent lithium oxide loss from the mixed oxide, cathodes total porosity increases with increasing lithium content up to a limiting composition beyond which a porosity decrease takes place. Lithium oxide loss, on the other hand, leads to a total porosity decrease which is related both to the initial lithium content and to the amount of the lithium oxide lost. Such a behaviour can be explained on the basis of the different mechanism by which the mixed oxide is obtained depending on the relative amounts of nickel and lithium carbonate in the starting mixture. Moreover it is shown that the observed total porosity changes are mainly a consequence of microporosity changes.
1990
Materials Science and Engineering is concerned with admixtures of matter or the basic matter from which products are made. The category covers ceramics, paper and wood products, polymers, textiles, composites, coatings & films, and biomaterials. Other areas covered in this category include Materials Chemistry, the application of chemistry to materials design and testing; Condensed Matter/Solid State Physics, the branch of physics concerned with the structure and properties of condensed matter (superconductors, semiconductors, ferroelectrics, and dielectrics); and Physical Chemistry/Chemical Physics, the application of the concepts and laws of physics to chemical phenomena.
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Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
39
251
261
11
Molten carbonate fuel cell MCFC; lithium carbonate; nickel oxides cathodes
6
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Antolini, E.; Leonini, M.; Massarotti, Vincenzo; Marini, Amedeo; Berbenni, Vittorio; Capsoni, Doretta
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/101332
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