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Electronic conductivity ceramic high-temperature

In addition to being able to catalyze the dissociation of O2. the material used for the cathode must be electronically conductive in the presence of air at high temperature, a property found primarily in noble metals and electronically conductive oxides. Ionic conductivity is also desirable for extending the reaction zone well into the electrode since the ions must ultimately be transferred to the electrolyte. Since precious metals are prohibitively expensive when used in quantities sufficient for providing electronic conductivity, essentially all SOFC prototypes use perovskite-based cathodes, with the most common material being a Sr-doped LaMnOs (LSM). In most cases, the cathode is a composite of the electronically conductive ceramic and an ionically conductive oxide, often the same material used in the electrolyte. [Pg.608]

Jiang Q, Faraji S, Slade D A and Stagg-Williams S M (2010), A review of mixed ionic and electronic conducting ceramic membranes as oxygen sources for high-temperature reactors , Membr Sci Technol, 14,2iS-2Ti. [Pg.379]

Ceramics for electronics Resistance to high temperatures, high electric resistance, thermal conductivity, ease of metallization Low/... [Pg.206]

All metals conduct electricity on account of the mobility of the electrons that bind the atoms together. Ionic, molecular, and network solids are typically electrical insulators or semiconductors (see Sections 3.f3 and 3.14), but there are notable exceptions, such as high-temperature superconductors, which are ionic or ceramic solids (see Box 5.2), and there is currently considerable interest in the electrical conductivity ol some organic polymers (see Box 19.1). [Pg.323]


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Conductance electronic

Conducting electrons

Conduction electrons

Conductivity: electronic

Electron conductance

Electron conductivity

Electron temperature

Electronic conduction

Electronic temperature

Electronically conducting

Electronics conduction

High Temperature Conductivity

Temperature ceramic

Temperature conductivity

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