Oxygen Potential Transition in Mixed Conducting Oxide Electrolyte
Yanhao Dong, I-Wei Chen

TL;DR
This paper reveals a universal oxygen potential transition in mixed conducting oxides, driven by electronic conductivity changes, which impacts the stability and microstructure of solid oxide electrochemical devices.
Contribution
It demonstrates the existence of a sharp oxygen potential transition linked to electronic conductivity changes, challenging the traditional linear assumption in oxide electrolytes.
Findings
Ubiquitous oxygen potential transition observed
Transition is sensitive to electrode potential and current density
Linked to microstructural and stability issues in devices
Abstract
It is generally assumed that oxygen potential in a thin oxide electrolyte follows a linear distribution between electrodes. Jacobsen and Mogensen have shown, however, that this is not the case for thin zirconia membranes in solid oxide electrochemical cells. Here we demonstrate that there is a ubiquitous oxygen potential transition rooted in the p-type/n-type transition of electronic conductivity inside mixed conducting oxides, and that the transition is extremely sensitive to electrode potential and current density. It is also remarkably sensitive to the conductivity ratio of electrons and holes, as well as their association with lattice oxygens and vacancies, which tends to increase the oxygen flow. Direct evidence of a sharp oxygen potential transition has been found in an equally sharp grain size transition in electrically loaded zirconia. More broadly speaking, the oxygen potential…
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