Faculty Publications
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Item Electrochemical characterization of electrolyte supported solid oxide electrolysis cell during CO2/H2O co-electrolysis(Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH, 2024) Shirasangi, R.; Prasad Dasari, H.P.; Saidutta, M.B.High-temperature co-electrolysis is studied on electrolyte-supported NiO-YSZ/NiO-SDC/ScSZ/LSCF-GDC/LSCF (NiO: Nickel Oxide, YSZ: Yttria-stabilized zirconia, SDC: Samarium-doped ceria, ScSZ: Scandia-stabilized zirconia, LSCF: Lanthanum Strontium Cobalt Ferrite, GDC: Gadolinium-doped ceria) button cell. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) was recorded under open-circuit voltage (OCV) and co-electrolysis mode over various operating conditions, including temperature, water vapor content, and applied voltage. Interfacial polarization resistance (Rp) is obtained from peak arcs located in the three regions: gas conversion resistance (Region I (0.01 to 0.1 Hz)), gas diffusion resistance (Region II (0.1 to 100 Hz)) and air electrode charge transfer resistance (Region III (100 to 10,000 Hz)). As the temperature increased from 700 to 850 oC, Rp decreased from 18.15 to 3.32 Ω.cm2 at 1.3 V for 10%CO2/3%H2O. From the Distribution of relaxation times (DRT) studies, one additional peak, P5 (fuel gas conversion or gas-phase diffusion in the pores of the air electrode), is observed, and Region III (100 to 10,000 Hz) consists of two additional peaks: P1 (ionic transport coupled with gas diffusion close to triple phase boundaries (TPBs)) and P2 (fuel electrode charge transfer reaction), which were not clearly distinguished from EIS. Region II dominates in the overall polarization resistance. At 800 oC, for 10%CO2/3%H2O, the Rp decreased from 6.78 to 4.82 Ω.cm2, with an increase in the applied voltage from 1.3 to 1.5 V. At 800oC/1.5 V, the Rp values are 4.41, 8.09, and 6.77 Ω.cm2 for H2O, CO2, and co-electrolysis. At 800 ºC/1.5 V, with an increase in the water vapor content from 3%H2O to 15%H2O, there is not much change in the Rp value; therefore, 10%H2O is sufficient. H2 consumption is between 23 and 36%, depending on the temperature at OCV. At 800 °C for (10%H2/10%CO2/10%H2O), co-electrolysis occurs at applied voltage, along with Reverse water gas shift (RWGS) reaction. Graphical Abstract: (Figure presented.) © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2024.Item Diesel soot oxidation over Mn–Pr–Ce oxide catalysts: structural changes and the impact of Mn doping(Royal Society of Chemistry, 2025) Patil, S.S.; Prasad Dasari, H.P.; Shirasangi, R.; Harshini, H.The soot oxidation activity of manganese-doped ceria-praseodymium catalysts, synthesized via solution combustion synthesis, was evaluated. The analyses performed with XRD and Raman spectroscopy indicated that the Mn-doped CP catalysts displayed the typical fluorite structure of CeO2. The addition of Mn to CP led to a reduction in crystallite size from 14 nm to below 10 nm. The F2g Raman active mode of fluorite-structured Ce and the oxygen vacancies resulting from the addition of Mn and Pr (bands B 560 cm–1 to 580 cm–1) were consistently observed across all Mn-doped CP catalysts. 15 and 20 Mn-CP exhibited an additional secondary phase identified as Mn2O3. The analysis of BET surface area and BJH pore size revealed that the Mn-doped CP catalysts exhibited both micro and mesoporous characteristics. The H2-TPR and O2-TPD profiles indicated enhanced reducibility resulting from the incorporation of Mn and Pr into CeO2-doped catalysts. The improved T50 (365 ± 1 1C) for the 5 Mn-CP catalytic system is primarily due to its increased specific surface area of 45 m2 g–1 and the presence of active surface adsorbed oxygen species identified in the XPS and O2-TPD studies. 5 Mn-CP exhibited the lowest activation energy value compared to all other Mn-doped catalysts. © 2025 The Author(s)
