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Mechanism of Pinhole Formation in Membrane Electrode Assemblies for PEM Fuel Cells
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2004
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Materials ScienceElectrical EngineeringChemical EngineeringPinhole Formation MechanismEngineeringMicrofabricationMembrane CreepElectrochemistryPem Fuel CellsProton-exchange MembraneElectrochemical CellElectrochemical ProcessMembrane Electrode AssembliesBiofuel CellPinhole FormationMicrostructure
The pinhole formation mechanism was studied with a variety of MEAs using ex-situ and in-situ methods. The ex-situ tests included the MEA aging in oxygen and MEA heat of ignition. In-situ durability tests were performed in fuel cells at different operating conditions with hydrogen and oxygen. After the in-situ failure, MEAs were analyzed with an Olympus BX 60 optical microscope and Cambridge 120 scanning electron microscope. MEA chemical analysis was performed with an IXRF EDS microanalysis system. The MEA failure analyses showed that pinholes and tears were the MEA failure modes. The pinholes appeared in MEA areas where the membrane thickness was drastically reduced. Their location coincided with the stress concentration points, indicating that membrane creep was responsible for their formation. Some of the pinholes detected had contaminant particles precipitated within the membrane. This mechanism of pinhole formation was correlated to the polymer blistering.