Background of the invention and prior art
[0001] Within the field of electrochemistry, there is a well-known type of electrolytic
cell known as chlor-alkali cell. Basically this is a cell wherein chlorine gas and
caustic soda, viz., sodium hydroxide, are produced by passing an electric current
through a concentrated salt (brine) solution containing sodium chloride and water.
A large portion of the chlorine and caustic soda for the chemical and plastic industries
is produced in chlor-alkali cells.
[0002] Such cells are divided by a separator into anode and cathode compartments. The separator
characteristically can be a substantially hydraulically impermeable membrane, e.g.,
a hydraulically impermeable cation exchange membrane such as the commercially available
NAFION
R (trademark of E. I. Du Pont de Nemours and Co). Alternatively, the separator can
be a porous diaphragm, e.g. asbestos, which can be in the form of vacuum deposited
fibers or asbestos paper sheet as are well known in the art. The anode can be a valve
metal, e.g., titanium, provided with a precious metal coating to yield what is known
in the art as a dimensionally stable anode.
[0003] The cathodes employed in such chlor-alkali cells are subjected to the corrosive environment
of the caustic soda and so special precautionary measures and techniques have been
employed in an attempt to reduce damage and deactivation of the active layer particles
contained in the cathode used in chlor-alkali cells.
[0004] One of the unwanted by-products present in a chlor-alkali cell is hydrogen which
forms at the cell cathode. This hydrogen increases the power requirement for the overall
electrochemical process and eliminating its production is one of the desired results
in chlor-alkali cell operation. Fairly recently, attention has been directed in chlor-alkali
cell technology to various forms of oxygen (air) cathodes. Such cathodes can result
in significant savings in the cost of electrical energy employed to operate chlor-alkali
cells. Estimates indicate that there is a theoretical savings of about 25% of the
total electrical energy required to operate chlor-alkali cells provided that the formation
of molecular hydrogen gas at the cathode can be prevented. In other words, about 25%
of the electrical energy employed in a chlor-alkali cell is used to form hydrogen
at the cathode. Hence, the prevention of hydrogen formation at the cathode can lead
to significant savings in the cost of electrical power. This is one of the major benefits
of and purposes for oxygen (air) cathodes. However, such cathodes, being in contact
with the electrolyte caustic soda, are subjected to the corrosive action thereof.
[0005] One known form of oxygen (air) cathode involves use of an active cathode layer containing
porous active carbon particles whose activity in promoting the formation of hydroxide
may or may not be catalyzed (enhanced) using precious metal catalyst materials, such
as silver, platinum, etc. The active carbon particles become wetted (flooded) by the
caustic soda thereby significantly reducing their ability to eliminate the formation
of hydrogen at the cathode and resulting in a loss of activity of the air cathode.
Some attempts to overcome this difficulty involve incorporating hydrophobic materials,
e.g., polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) in such active layers in particulate or fibrillated
(greatly attenuated and elongated form) to impart hydrophobicity to the active carbon
layer, per se. With the PTFE, however, comes the problem of reduced electrical conductivity
in the cathode active layer in as much as PTFE, per se, in nonconductive when compared
with the porous active carbon particles. Such active carbon/PTFE-containing electrode
active layers are subject to loss of strength resulting in failure combined with blistering
thereof when the chlor-alkali cell is -operated at high current densities, viz., current
densities ranging from about 250 mA/cm
2 and higher for prolonged time periods.
[0006] Some oxygen (air) cathodes contain PTFE in both the active layer and in a backing
sheet laminated thereto. The PTFE has been employed in particulate or fibrillated
(greatly attenuated and elongated) form to impart hydrophobicity to the desired layer.
Thus it can be seen that the development of corrosion resistant oxygen (air) cathodes
of improved durability for use in conjunction with chlor-alkali cells is an overall
objective in the newly-developing oxygen (air) cathode field.
Field of the invention
[0007] The present invention is directed to a gas, e.g., oxygen (air) electrode containing
an improved fibrillated matrix electrode active layer and a process for forming the
electrode such that the active layer when laminated to a backing (wet- proofing) sheet
and current collector results in an oxygen (air) cathode having high durability and
resistance to degradation due to the corrosive environment present in a chlor-alkali
cell, fuel cell, etc. In other words, the fibrillated, matrix active layer produced
in accordance with this invention is capable of long life with a lower rate of decline
in operating voltage. The term "matrix" is employed herein in as much as it is believed
that in an electrode of this type, the catalyzed active carbon is thoroughly involved
with assisting the reduction of oxygen within the cathode active layer while the carbon
black and the PTFE act in one or more ways; (a) as a hydrophobic gas path, (b) as
a conductive agent, which lowers the electrical resistance of the mixture from about
2 or 3 times, resulting in a better current distribution to the current collector,
and (c) as a hydrophobic binder, incorporating the wet active carbon in a matrix of
PTFE/carbon black.
[0008] U.S. Patent 4 058 482 discloses a sheet material principally comprised of a polymer
such as PTFE and a pore-forming material wherein the sheet is formed of co-agglomerates
of the polymer and the pore former. This patent teaches mixing polymer particles with
positively charged particles of a pore former, e.g., zinc oxide, to form co-agglomerates
thereof followed by mixing same with a catalyst suspension so as to form co-agglomerates
of catalyst and polymer-pore-former agglomerates followed by pressing, drying, and
sintering these co-agglomerates. Subsequent to this sintering, the pore former can
be leached out of the electrodes.
[0009] U.S. Patent 4 150 076 (a division of U.S. Patent 4 058 482) is directed to the process
for forming the sheet of U.S. Patent 4 058 482, said process involving formation of
polymer-pore-former co-agglomerates, distributing same as a layer on a suitable electrode
support plate, for example, a carbon paper, to form a fuel cell electrode by a process
which includes pressing, drying, sintering, and leaching.
[0010] U.S. Patent 4 170 540 to Lazarz et al discloses microporous membrane material suitable
for electrolytic cell utilization and formed by blending particulate polytetrafluoroethylene,
a dry pore-forming particulate material, and an organic lubricant. These three materials
are milled and formed into a sheet which is rolled to the desired thickness, sintered,
and subjected to leaching of the pore-forming material. The present invention avoids
the use of lubricants and similarly avoids the necessity of removing same. Additionally,
according to the present invention, when forming the sheet by passing the fibrillated
mixture of PTFE-particulate pore-forming agent through the rollers, special care is
taken to avoid conditions which would cause the PTFE to sinter.
[0011] British Patent 1 284 054 to Boden et al is directed to forming an air-breathing electrode
containing an electrolyte within an air- depolarized cell. This air-breathing electrode
is made by hot pressing a fluoropolymer sheet containing a pore-forming agent onto
a catalyst composition (containing silver) and a metallic grid member. According to
page 3 of said British patent, the PTFE-pore-forming agent-paraffin wax containing
sheet, is subjected to a solvent wash to remove the paraffin wax and then sintered
and while it still contains the pore-forming particles, it is then ready for application
to the catalyst composition of the air electrode for the hot pressing operation. Hot
pressing involves the use of pressures ranging from about 350 to about 2.05 10
8 N/m
2 in conjunction with temperatures ranging from about 94°C to 205°C.
[0012] U.S. Patent 3 385 780 to I-Ming Feng discloses a thin, porous electrode consisting
of a thin layer of a polytetrafluoroethylene pressed against a thin layer of polytetrafluoroethylene
containing finely divided platinized carbon, the platinum being present in amount
of 1.2 to 0.1
Mg/
CM2 in the electrically conductive face of the thin electrode, viz., the side containing
the platinized carbon, viz., the active layer. A thermally decomposable filler material
can be used, or the filler can be a material capable of being leached out by either
a strong base or an acid. U.S. Patent 3 385 780 also mentions a single unit electrode
involving finely divided carbon in mixture with PTFE.
[0013] U.S. Patent 4 135 995 to Cletus N. Welch is directed to a cathode having a hydrophilic
portion formed of a solid intercalation compound of fluorine and carbon of the empirical
formula CF
X, where x ranges from about 0.25 to 1 and preferably ranges from about 0.25 to 0.7.
The intercalation compounds of carbon and fluorine are referred to as hydrophilic,
fluorinated graphites and graphite fluorides characterized by an infrared spectrum
showing an absorption band at 1220 cm-
1. A layer of hydrophobic material, such as polyperfluoroethylene (polytetrafluoroethylene)
can be utilized in a hydrophobic portion of the same layer or it can be utilized in
the form of a different layer which can be associated with a current carrier layer.
The Welch cathode may be utilized as an oxygen (air) cathode.
[0014] U.S. Patent 3 838 064 to John W. Vogt et al is directed to a process for dust control
involving mixing a finely divided fibrillatable polytetrafluoroethylene with a material
which characteristically forms a dust to form a dry mixture followed by sufficient
working to essentially avoid dusting. Very small concentrations of PTFE, e.g., from
about 0.02 to about 3% by weight, are employed to achieve the dust control. Corresponding
U.S. Patent 3 838 092 also to Vogt et al is directed to dustless compositions containing
fibrous polytetrafluoroethylene in concentrations of about 0.02% to less than 1 %,
e.g., about 0.75% by weight, of PTFE based on total solids.
[0015] An article entitled "On the Effect of Various Active Carbon Catalysts on the Behavior
of Carbon Gas-Diffusion Air Electrodes: 1. Alkaline Solutions" by I. Iliev et al appearing
in the Journal of Power Sources, 1 (1976/1977) 35, 46. On pages 35 to 46 of said Journal
there are described double layer fixed-zone, PTFE-bonded carbon electrodes having
a gas supplying layer of carbon black "XC" (not further defined by the authors) wetproofed
with 35% PTFE and an active layer consisting of a 30
Mg/
CM2 mixture of the same wetproof material "XC-35" and active carbon "weight ratio of
1:2.5". These electrodes were sintered at 350°C under a pressure of 1.96 10
7 N/m
2 and employed as oxygen (air) cathodes in alkaline test environments.
[0016] The active layers and laminates of this invention are also readily distinguishable
from the oxygen (air) cathodes described in Iliev et al. In accordance with this invention,
the active layer is a "matrix" layer prepared essentially by shear blending (fibrillating)
a combined mixture of two separately formed mixes which are in turn mixed, chopped
and then fibrillated to result in a coherent, self-sustaining sheet having a tensile
strength characteristically exceeding 6.8x10
5 N/ m
2 (100 psi). Such active layers, when laminated, yield a matrix electrode having an
unusual combination of high tensile strength with resistance to blistering under high
current densities in use. It will be observed that the conditions employed in formation
of the two separately formed mixtures and fibrillation thereof are insufficient to
affect sintering of the PTFE contained in said matrix electrode.
[0017] The publication "Advances in Chemistry Series", copyright 1969, Robert F. Gould (Editor),
American Chemical Society Publications, contains at pages 13 to 23 an article 3e entitled
"A Novel Air Electrode" by H. P. Landi et al. The electrode described contains 2 to
8% PTFE, is produced without sintering and is composed of graphitic carbon (ACCO Graphite)
or metallized graphitic carbon particles blended with a PTFE latex and a thermoplastic
molding compound to form an interconnected network which enmeshes the filter particles.
This blend is molded into a flat sheet and the thermoplastic is then extracted.
[0018] British Patent 1 222 172 discloses use of an embedded conductive metal mesh or screen
35 with a formed electrode 30 containing a particulate matrix 34 of polytetrafluoroethylene
polymer particles 21 in which there are located dispersed electrically conductive
catalyst particles 24 which can be silver-coated nickel and silver-coated carbon particles,
viz., two different types of silver-coated particles in the PTFE particulate matrix
in an attempt to overcome an increase in resistance as silver is consumed in the gas
diffusion fuel cells to which said British Patent is directed.
[0019] The US patent No. 3,943,006 discloses a method of making an electrode structure for
fuel cells comprising blending of noble metal black particles, particules of dry polytetrafluoroethylene
(PTFE) and particles of soluble bulking agent in a liquid. The electrode bulking agent
is insoluble in the liquid. Polytetrafluoroethylene constitutes at least 10% of the
combined weight of the noble metal black and PTFE. After blending the liquid is filtered
from the blend to form a filtered mixture. The filtered mixture is then subjected
to rolling to form a sheet of fibrillated PTFE containing noble metal black and bulking
agent. Upon rolling the remainder of the blending liquid is removed and the electrode
sheet sintered at 325°C to allow the PTFE in the electrode to set.
Brief summary of the invention
[0020] The active layer of this invention is comprised of active carbon particles present
within an unsintered network (matrix) of fibrillated carbon black/PTFE. The laminated
gas electrode of this invention are comprised of said active layer laminated on the
electrode working surface to a current distributor and on its opposite surface to
a porous coherent, hydrophobic, polytetrafluoroethylene-containing wetproofing layer.
[0021] The active carbon particles of the active layer preferably are catalyzed to contain
silver or platinum and range in size from about 1 to 30 micrometers. The unsintered
network (matrix) contains from about 25 to 35 weight parts of polytetrafluoroethylene
and about 75 to 65 weight parts of carbon black having a surface area ranging from
about 25 to 300 m
2 per gram and particle size ranging from about 0.005 to 0.3 micrometers. The active
layer contains a pore-forming agent and the concentration of active carbon therein
ranges from about 40 to 80% by weight.
[0022] It should be understood that so long as the active layer is incorporated therein,
the present laminates can incorporate any backing layer and any current distributor,
respectively, including those of the prior art disclosed herein. Of course, then such
laminates will not posses the specific desirable characteristics obtainable in the
specific laminates formed and referred to herein. Nevertheless, the present invention
in its broadest aspects embraces the active layer with any wet- proofing (backing)
layer and any current distributor.
Detailed description of the invention
The backing (wetproofing layer)
[0023] The three-layer laminated electrodes produced in accordance with this invention contain
an outer wetproofing or backing layer the purpose of which is to prevent electrolyte
from coming through the active layer and wetting the gas side of the active layer
and thereby impeding access of the oxygen (air) gas to the active layer. Such backing
layer can be made porous by incorporating a pore former in polytetrafluoroethylene
and can be made conductive by incorporating carbon black particles, per se, or carbon
black particles which have been partially fluorinated to certain extents of fluorination,
as will be pointed out in more detail hereinafter.
[0024] When it is desired to employ a porous PTFE backing layer made by the single-pass
procedure and containing chiefly only a pore former and PTFE, the backing layer can
be prepared using the PTFE particles in the form of a nonaqueous dispersion (eg. the
PTFE DuPont Teflon@ 6A series) which, consists of coagulates or agglomerates having
a particle size of about 500 to 550 micrometers which were made by coagulating PTFE
dispersed particles of about 0.05 to 0.5 micrometers and having an average particle
size of about 0.2 micrometers. These agglomerates are dispersed in an organic liquid
medium, usually a lower alkyl alcohol, such as isopropanol, and broken down by beating,
e.g., in a high speed blender for about 3 minutes to redisperse same and break up
the larger particles into smaller PTFE particles in isopropanol.
[0025] Then pulverized sodium carbonate particles, having particle sizes ranging from about
1 to about 40 micrometers, and more usually from about 5 to 20 micrometers, and preferably
having an average particle size of 3 to 4 micrometers added to the alcohol dispersion
of the blended PTFE particles in a weight ratio ranging from about 30 to 40 weight
parts of PTFE to about 60 to about 70 weight parts of sodium carbonate to result in
an intimate dispersion of PTFE with pore former. Then the alcohol is removed and the
PTFE-Na
2C
03 mix particles are dried.
[0026] Subsequent to drying, the particulate PTFE- sodium carbonate mixture is subjected
to mixing under conditions which mildly fibrillate the PTFE. The mixing is conducted
in a mixer with a charge of approximately 140 g of mix. This fibrillation is performed
for approximately 10 to 20, e.g., 15, minutes at 100 rpm and 15° to 25°C. e.g., 20°C.
[0027] After fibrillating and before passing the mix between rolls, the fibrillated PTFE-pore
former mix is chopped for 1 to 20 seconds, e.g., 5 to 10 seconds.
[0028] The mildly fibrillated mixture of PTFE-sodium carbonate is then dry rolled into sheet
form using a single pass through one or more sets of metal, e.g., chrome plated steel
rolls. Temperatures of about 70° to about 90°C and roll gaps ranging from about 0.13
to about 0.4 mm (5 to about 15 mils) are customarily employed. The conditions employed
in the dry rolling are such as to avoid sintering of the PTFE particles.
[0029] On the other hand, when the laminate has a backing layer containing carbon particles
to enhance the conductivity thereof, either unmodified carbon black particles, can
be utilized to impart conductivity to the backing layer.
[0030] When utilizing unfluorinated carbon black particles to impart the conductivity to
the PTFE-containing porous backing layer, carbon blacks can be employed which are
electrically conductive. The term carbon black is used generically as defined in an
article entitled "Fundamentals of Carbon Black Technology" by Frank Spinelli appearing
in the August 1970 edition of American Print Maker to include carbon blacks of a particulate
nature within the size range of 5 to 300 nanometers which includes a family of industrial
carbons such as lampblacks, channel blacks, furnace blacks, thermal blacks, etc.
[0031] A preferable form of unmodified (unfluorinated) carbon black is acetylene carbon
black, e.g., made from acetylene by continuous thermal decomposition, explosion, by
combustion in an oxygen-deficient atmosphere, or by various electrical processes.
Characteristically, acetylene black contains 99.5+ weight percent carbon and has a
particle size ranging from about 0.005 to about 0.2 micrometers. The true density
of the acetylene black material is approximately 1.95 g/cm
2. Preferably, the acetylene black is a commercially available acetylene black with
a mean particle size of 0.0425 micrometers with a standard deviation of about 0.025
micrometers. Such acetylene blacks are somewhat hydrophobic, e.g., as demonstrated
by the fact that the particles thereof float on cold water but quickly sink in hot
water.
[0032] Hydrophobic electroconductive electrode backing layers can be prepared by combining
the PTFE in particulate form as a dispersion with the carbon black particles as described
above. According to a preferred embodiment of this invention, the acetylene carbon
black employed is that having an average particle size of approximately 0.0425 micrometers
with the remainder having a standard deviation of 0.025 micrometers. The range of
particle size is from about 0.005 to about 0.2 micrometers.
[0033] These acetylene black particles are mixed with PTFE particles by adding a commercially
available aqueous dispersion of PTFE, (e.g. DuPont "Teflon@ 30") to the carbon black,
also dispersed in water to form an intimate mixture thereof. The mix can contain from
about 50 to about 80 weight % carbon black and from about 20 to about 50 weight %
PTFE. Water is removed and the mix is dried. The dried mix can then be heated at 275°
to 300°C for 10 to 80 minutes to remove a substantial portion of the wetting agent
used to disperse the PTFE in water. Approximately 50 weight % of this mix is fibrillated
(as described above in relation to the "one-pass" process) and then mixed with the
remaining unfibrillated mix. A water soluble pore-forming agent, e.g., sodium carbonate,
can be added thereto and the carbon black mixture with polytetrafluorethylene and
pore former mixed.
[0034] Such conductive PTFE/carbon black-containing backing layers characteristically have
thickness of 0.13 to 0.4 mm (5 to 15 mils) and may be produced by filtration of by
passing the afore mentioned actylene black-PTFE mixes through heated rollers at temperatures
of 65° to 90°C or by any other suitable technique.
[0035] Then these backing layers are laminated with a current distributor and the active
layer as disclosed herein.
[0036] Resistivity of this wetproofing layer was measured and found to be 0.53 ohm-cm. The
resistivity of pure PTFE is greater than 10 ohm-cm by way of comparison.
[0037] The resistivity of the PTFE/SB carbon black wetproofing layer illustrates that it
is still low enough to be useful in forming electrodes when in intimate contact with
a current distributor.
[0038] Permeability is an important factor in high current density operation of a gas electrode
having hydrophobic (conductive or nonconductive) backing, viz., a wetproofing or liquid
barrier layer.
[0039] The wetproofing layers employed in forming laminates according to this invention
have adequate permeability to be comparable to that of pure PTFE backings (even when
pressed at up to 7.6 10' N/m
2) yet have far superior electroconductivity.
[0040] The testing of air electrodes employing such backing layers in the corrosive alkaline
environment present in a chlor-alkali cell has revealed a desirable combination of
electroconductivity with balanced hydrophobicity and said layers are believed to have
achieved a desired result in the oxygen (air) cathode field.
Conductive backing layer containing partially fluorinated carbon black
[0041] When in conjunction with the active layer according to the invention conductive backing
layers are employed, it is also contemplated to use partially fluorinated carbon black
backing layers. Partially fluorinated carbon blacks are preferably acetylene blacks
which are subjected to partial fluorination to arrive at compounds having the formula
CF
X, wherein x ranges from about 0.1 to about 0.18.
[0042] The hydrophobicity of the already hydrophobic acetylene black particles is enhanced
by such partial fluorination as was observed from comparative experiments wherein
the unfluorinated acetylene black particles floated on cold water but quickly sank
in hot water versus the partially fluorinated acetylene blacks, fluorinated to the
extent of x being about 0.1 to about 0.18, which floated on hot water virtually indefinitely
and could not be made to pierce the meniscus of the water.
[0043] Such hydrophobic electrode backing layers (containing CF
x=0.1 to
0.18 partially fluorinated carbon black) were prepared by combining the PTFE in particulate
form as a dispersion with the partially fluorinated acetylene black particles. According
to the preferred embodiment, the acetylene black employed is that having an average
particle size of approximately 0.0425 micrometers with a standard deviation of 0.025
micrometers. The range of particle size is from about 0.005 to about 0.2 micrometers.
[0044] The partially fluorinated carbon black particles are suspended in isopropylalcohol
and a dilute aqueous dispersion of PTFE (2 weight % PTFE) is added gradually thereto.
This dilute dispersion is made from PTFE dispersion of 60 weight parts of PTFE in
40 weight parts of water to form an intimate mixture of CF
x=0.1 to
0.18/PTFE. The PTFE/ CF
x=0.1 to
0.18 mix was the filtered, dried, treated to remove the PTFE wetting agent (by heating
at 300°C for 20 minutes in air or extracting it with chloroform), a and briefly chopped
to form a grannular mix and then fabricated into sheet form either by (a) passing
between heated rollers (65° to 90°C), or (b) by dispersion of said PTFE/CF
x=0.1 to
0.
18 particles in a_ liquid dispersion medium capable of wetting said particles and filtration
on a salt (NaCI) bed previously deposited on filter paper or like filtration media,
or (c) by spraying the CF
x=0.1 to
0.18/PTFE mix in a mixture of water and alcohol, e.g., isopropyl alcohol, on an electrode
active layer/current distributor composite assembly and drying to yield a fine- pore
wetproofing layer. The mix can contain from about 50 to 80 weight % CF
x=0.1 to 0.18 and about 20 to 50 weight % PTFE.
[0045] In any case, a pore former can be incorporated into the CF
x=0.1 to 0.18/PTFE mix prior to forming the wetproofing layer or sheet. The pore former can be
of the soluble type, e.g., sodium carbonate or the like, or the volatile type, e.g.,
ammonium benzoate or the like.
[0046] Whether the wetproofing sheet is formed by rolling, filtration or spraying, the pore
former can be removed by washing (if a soluble one) or heating (if a volatile one)
either prior to laminating the wetproofing layer to the current distributor (with
the distributor on the gas side) and active layer, or after lamination thereof. In
cases where a soluble pore former is used, the laminate is preferably given a hot
(50° to about 100°C) soak in an alkylene polyol, e.g., ethylene glycol or the like,
prior to water washing for 10 to 60 minutes. The ethylene glycol hot soak combined
with water washing imparts enhanced resistance of such laminated electrodes to blistering
during water washing.
[0047] When the wetproofing layer is formed by filtration, it can be released from the filter
media by washing with water to dissolve the salt bed, drying and pressing lightly
to consolidate same, followed by laminating to the current distributor and active
layer. Alternatively, the filter paperlsalt/wetproofing layer can be laminated to
the current distributor and active layer (with the filter paper side away from the
current distributor and the wetproofing layer side in contact with the current distributor)
followed by dissolving the salt away.
[0048] The testing of such partially fluorinated backing layers in the corrosive alkaline
environment of use in a chlor-alkali cell has revealed a desirable combination of
electroconductivity with balanced hydrophobicity and said layers are believed to have
achieved a desired result in the oxygen (air) cathode field.
The active layer
[0049] In forming the three-layer laminate electrode of this invention, there is employed
a "matrix" active layer as an essential component. This matrix active layer comprises
active carbon particles present within an unsintered network (matrix) of fibrillated
carbon black/polytetra- fluoroethylene.
[0050] One stream (mixture), the matrixing mix component, is obtained by adding a dilute
dispersion containing polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), having a particle size of about
from 0.05 to 0.5 micrometers in water to mix of a carbon black, e.g., an acetylene
black, and water ink a weight ratio of from about 25 om 35 weight parts of PTFE to
from about 65 to 75 weight parts of carbon black to form an intimate mix of PTFE/carbon
black particles, drying the aforementioned mixture heat treating it to remove the
PTFE wetting agent thereby resulting in a first component mix.
[0051] The second component, the active carbon-containing catalyst component, is comprised
of an optionally catalyzed, preferably previously deashed and optionally particle
size classified active carbon, having a particle size ranging from about 1 to about
30 micrometers and more usually from about 10 to about 20 micrometers.
[0052] Deashing can be done by pretreatment with caustic and acid to remove a substantial
amount of ash from the active carbon prior to catalyzing same. The term ash refers
to oxides principally comprised of silica, alumina, and iron oxides. The deashed,
classified, active carbon particles can then be catalyzed with a precious metal, e.g.,
by contacting with a silver or platinum precursor, followed by chemical reduction
with or without heat to deposit silver, platinum or other respective precious metal
on the active carbon. The catalyzed carbon can be filtered, dried at temperatures
ranging from about 80 to 150°C, with or without vacuum, to produce a second (active
carbon catalyst) component or mixture.
[0053] These mixtures are then chopped together, with or without the addition of a particulate,
subsequently removable (fugitive) pore-forming agent and then shear blended (fibrillated)
at temperatures ranging from about 40° to about 60°C for 2 to 10 minutes, e.g., 4
to 6 minutes, in the presence of a processing aid or lubricant, e.g., a 50:50 mixture
(by weight) of isopropylalcohol and water, viz., when no pore former is used as bulking
agent. When a water-soluble pore former is used, the lubricant can be isopropyl alcohol.
The previously chopped mixture can be fibrillated using a mixer. During this fibrillation
step, the chopped mixture of the two-component mixes is subject to shear blending
forces, viz., a combination of compression and attenuation which has the effect of
substantially lengthening the PTFE in the presence of the remaining components. This
fibrillation is believed to substantially increase the strength of the resulting sheets
formed from the fibrillated mixed components. After such fibrillating, the mixture
is noted to be fibrous and hence the term "fiberizing" is used herein as synonymous
with fibrillating.
[0054] Subsequent to fibrillation, the mixture is dried, chopped for from 1 to 10 seconds
into a fine powder and formed into a sheet by rolling at 50°C to 100°C or by deposition
on a filter. A pore former, if one is employed as a bulking agent, can be then removed
prior to electrode fabrication. In the event no pore former is employed, the matrix
active layer sheet can be used (as is) as the active catalyst-containing layer of
an oxygen (air) cathode, e.g., for use in a chlor-alkali cell fuel cell, etc.
[0055] In forming the active layers and laminates of the present invention, the aforementioned
blistering and structural strength problems encountered at high current densities
in the active layers of gas electrodes can be substantially overcome by a process
involving: forming two separate components, one a matrixing mix component containing
carbon black with polytetrafluoroethylene particles and heat treating this PTFEcarbon
black mix at given temperature conditions; separately forming an active carbon-containing
catalyst component; combining these two separate components into a mix; chopping the
mix and shear-blending the chopped mix (fibrillating same) in order to arrive at a
readily formable matrix which can be formed, e.g., pressed between rolls, or deposited
upon a filter paper as a forming medium, pressed and then used as the active layer
in an oxygen (air) cathode. Such process results in active layers having reduced carbon
corrosion, higher conductivity and air-transport combined with strength when compared
with prior structures. This results in electrodes which can be used longer and are
more stable in use.
[0056] Tensile strength tests of the coherent, self-sustaining active layer sheets rolled
from the fiberized material characteristically displayed approximately 50% greater
tensile strength than unfiberized sheets. Life testing of electrodes employing the
fibrillated (fiberized) active layer sheets of this invention resulted in approximately
8900 hours life at 300 mA/cm
2 in 30% hot (60° to 80°C) aqueous sodium hydroxide before failure. In addition to
the advantages of longevity and strength, this process is easy to employ in making
large batches of active layer by continuous rolling of fibrillated mix resulting in
a material uniform in thickness and composition. Furthermore, the process is easy
to administer and control.
[0057] In accordance with one preferred embodiment of this invention, a water-soluble pore-forming
agent, e.g., sodium carbonate, is employed in the mixing step wherein the polytetrafluoroethylene
dispersion is mixed with carbon black. Alternatively, the pore-forming agent can be
added later, when the carbon black-PTFE mix and the catalyzed active carbon particles
are mixed together and chopped.
[0058] In forming an initial mixture of carbon black and polytetrafluoroethylene, the usual
particle size of the carbon black ranges from about 0.50 to about 300 micrometers
and it has a surface area ranging from about 25 to about 300 m
2jg. The PTFE is preferably employed in aqueous dispersion form and the mixture of
carbon black and polytetrafluoroethylene can contain from about 65 to about 75 weight
parts of carbon black and about 35 to about 25 weight parts of PTFE. After mixing,
the carbon black and PTFE are dried and then the dried initial mix is heated in air
at temperatures ranging from about 250° to 325°C, and more preferably 275° to 300°C,
for time periods ranging from 10 minutes to 1.5 hours and more preferably from 20
minutes to 60 minutes. This heating removes the bulk of the PTFE wetting agent.
[0059] The other component of the matrix electrode, viz., the active carbon, preferably
"RB" carbon manufactured by Calgon, a division of Merck., is deashed by contact with
an aqueous alkali, e.g., sodium hydroxide, or equivalent alkali, and more usually
aqueous sodium hydroxide having a sodium hydroxide concentration of about 28 to about
55 weight % for 0.5 to 25 hours. After washing, the active carbon is then contacted
with an acid, which can be hydrochloric acid, phosphoric acid, sulfuric acid, hydrobromic
acid, etc., at ambient temperatures using aqueous acid solutions having from about
10 to about 30 weight % acid, based on total solution for comparable time periods.
Subsequent to the contact with acid, the deashed active carbon particles are preferably
catalyzed. The deashed particles are preferably catalyzed as by contact with a precursor
of a precious metal catalyst. In the event that silver is desired to be deposited
within the pores of the active carbon, it is preferred to use silver nitrate as the
catalyst precursor followed by removal of excess silver and chemical reduction with
alkaline formaldehyde.
[0060] On the other hand, in the event that it is desired to deposit platinum within the
pores of the active carbon material, chloroplatinic acid can be used as a precursor
followed by removal of excess chloroplatinic acid and chemical reduction using sodium
borohydride or formaldehyde as a reducing agent. According to a preferred embodiment,
the platinum is derived from H
3Pt(S0
3)
20H. The reduction can be accompanied with the use of heat or it can be done at ambient
room temperatures. After catalysis, the active carbon particles are filtered and vacuum
dried as the active carbon-containing catalyst component in preparation for combination
with the acetylene black/PTFE matrixing component mix.
[0061] The carbon black/PTFE matrixing component mix preferably in a weight ratio ranging
from about 65 to 75 weight parts of carbon black to 25 to 35 weight parts of PTFE
is mixed with the catalyzed deashed active carbon-containing component and subjected
to chopping to blend the carbon black/PTFE matrixing component with the catalyst component
in the manner set forth above. This mix is then subjected to fibrillation (shear blending
or fiberizing), for example, in a mixer with appropriate blades at approximately 50°C.
This shear blended material has a combination of good conductivity and high tensile
strength with low PTFE content resulting in extraordinarily long life in use at high
current densities in the corrosive alkaline environment present in a chlor-alkali
cell.
[0062] The active layers are employed in this invention can contain (after removal of any
pore-forming bulking agent therefrom) from about 40 to 80 weight % of active carbon,
the remainder being the matrixing materials, carbon black and PTFE. Subsequent to
the fibrillation step, the fibrillated material is dried, chopped and rolled at approximately
75°C yielding the resulting coherent, self-sustaining and comparatively high tensile
strength active layer sheet. Active carbon-containing active layer sheets produced
in accordance with this invention characteristically have thicknesses of 0.3 to 0.6
millimeters with corresponding tensile strengths ranging from about 5.25 to 10.5 kg/cm
2 measured after pressing in a hydrualic press at 1.3 10
8 N/m
2 and 112°Cfor3 3 minutes).
Example 1
[0063] (A matrix active layer containing silver- catalyzed active carbon particles).
[0064] Commercially available ball milled "RB carbon" was found to have an ash content of
approximately 1% as received. This "RB carbon" was treated in 38% KOH for 16 hours
at 115°C and found to contain 5.6% ash content after a subsequent furnace operation.
The alkali treated "RB carbon" was then treated (immersed) for 16 hours at room temperature
in 1:1 aqueous hydrochloric acid (20% concentration). The resulting ash content had
been reduced to 2.8%. "RB carbon", deashed as above, was silvered in accordance with
the following procedure:
20 grams of deashed "RB cabon" were soaked in 500 ml of 0.161 N (normal) aqueous AgN03 with stirring for 2 hours. The excess solution was filtered off to obtain a filter
cake. The retrieved filtrate was 460 ml of 0.123 N AgN03. The filter cake was rapidly stirred into an 85°C alkaline formaldehyde solution,
prepared using 300 cm' (cubic centimeters) water, and 30 cm3 of 30% aqueous NaOH and 22 cm3 of 37% aqueous CH20, to ppt. Ag in the pores of the active carbon.
[0065] Calculation indicated that 79% of the 2.58 grams of retained silver in the catalyst
was derived from adsorbed silver nitrate.
[0066] Separately, a commercially available acetylene carbon black was mixed with polytetrafluoroethylene
dispersion (DuPont "Teflon@ 30") using an ultrasonic generator to obtain intimate
mixture. 7.2 grams of the carbon black/PTFE mix was high speed chopped, spread in
a dish, and then heat treated at 274°C for 20 minutes. Upon removal and cooling, it
was once again high speed chopped, this time for 10 seconds. Then 18 grams of the
classified silvered active carbon was added to the 7.2 grams of carbon black-PTFE
mix, high speed chopped for 15 seconds, and placed into a mixer. The mixture was added
to the cavity of the mixer using 50 cm
3 of a 30170 (by volume) mixture of isopropyl alcohol in water as a lubricant to aid
in fibrillating. The mixer was then run for 5 minutes at 30 rpm at 50°C, after which
the material was removed as a fibrous coherent mass. This mass was then oven dried
in a vacuum oven and was high speed chopped in preparation for rolling.
[0067] The chopped particulate material was then passed through a rolling mill. The resulting
matrix active layer sheet had an area density of 22.5 mg/cm
2 and was ready for lamination.
Example 2
[0068] (A matrix active layer containing platinum- catalyzed active carbon particles).
[0069] The procedure of Example 1 was repeated except that platinum was deposited on the
deashed active ("RB") carbon instead of silver. The 10 to 20 micrometers classified
deashed "RB" carbon had platinum applied thereto using H
3Pt(S0
3)
20H to deposit 1 weight part platinum per 34 weight parts of deashed active carbon.
[0070] After fibrillation and upon rolling, the area density of the active layer was determined
to be 22.2 mg/cm
2. This matrix active layer was then ready for lamination.
Example 3
[0071] (A matrix active layer containing silver- catalyzed active carbon particles without
heat treatment before fibrillation).
[0072] An active layer containing deashed, silvered "RB" active carbon was prepared as in
Example 1 with the exception that the 70/30 (by weight) acetylene carbon black/PTFE
matrixing material was not heat treated before fibrillating. This matrix active layer
was heavier than those prepared according to Example 1 and 2. It has an area density
of 26.6 mg/cm
2 and was ready for lamination.
Example 4
[0073] (A matrix active layer containing platinum- catalyzed active carbon particles incorporating
a pore former and heat treated, as in Examples 1 and 2, before fibrillation)
[0074] This matrix active layer was made according to the basic procedure of Example 1 using
deashed "RB" active carbon platinized by the method of U.S. Patent 4 044 193 to a
level of 19 weight parts of deashed "RB" active carbon per weight part platinum. Six
grams of ultrasonically treated (70:30, acetylene carbon black: PTFE) carbon black
were heat treated for 20 minutes at 274°C prior to addition thereto of 15 grams of
said active carbon along with 9 grams of sodium carbonate, which had been classified
to the particle size range of +5 to -10 micrometers. This material was fibrillated
and rolled out as in Example 1 and extracted by water (to remove the sodium carbonate)
after first hot soaking it in ethylene glycol at 75°C for 20 minutes. The resulting
active layer sheet was a very porous and lightweight material.
The current distributor layer
[0075] The current distributor layer, which is usually positioned next to and laminated
to the working surface of the active layer of the three-layer laminate, can be an
asymmetric woven wire mesh wherein the material from which the wire is made is selected
from the group consisting of nickel, nickel-plated copper, nickel-plated iron, silver-plated
nickel, and silver-plated, nickel-plated copper and like materials. In such asymmetric
woven wire mesh current distributors, there are more wires in one direction than in
the other direction.
[0076] The current distributor or collector utilized can be a woven or nonwoven, symmetrical
or asymmetric wire mesh or grid. Generally there is a preferred current carrying direction.
When the current distributor is a copper wire mesh, there should be as few wired feasible
in the noncurrent carrying direction. There will be found to be a minimum required
for fabrication of a stable wire cloth. A satisfactory asymmetric wire cloth configuration
may consist of, e.g. 20 wires/cm in the warp direction but only about 10 wires/cm
in the fill, thus enhancing the economy and utility of the wire cloth, simultaneously.
[0077] Such asymmetric, woven wire mesh current distributors are useful as the current distributor
in the three-layer laminates of this invention which are useful as oxygen cathodes
in chlor-alkali cells. Alternatively the current distributor can be of the plaque
type, viz., a comparatively compact yet porous layer, having porosities ranging from
about 30 to about 80% and made of powders of Ni, Ag or the like.
Forming the three-layer laminates
[0078] The three-layer laminates produced in accordance with this invention usually have
the active layer centrally located, viz., positioned in the middle between the backing
layer on the one side and the current distributor (collector) layer on the other side.
The three layers arranged as described are laminated using heat and pressure at temperatures
ranging from about 100° to about 130°C and pressures of 7.6 10
5 to 1.5 10
8 N/m
2. The laminates are preferably then subjected to a hot soaking step in ethylene glycol
or equivalent polyol to enhance removal of the pre-forming agent(s) employed to form
the aforementioned backing (wetproofing) layer and any bulking and/ or pore-forming
agent optionally included in the active layer, upon subsequent washing(s) with water.
[0079] The laminating pressures used will depend on whether or not electroconductive (carbon
black) particles have been included in the backing layer along with the PTFE. Thus
when using pure PTFE, viz., PTFE with pore former only, pressures of 6.1 10
7 to 1.21 10
8 N/m
2 have been determined to be adequate to effect the bonding of the conductive backing
to the active layer. Of course, higher laminating pressures can be employed so long
as the porosity of the structure is not destroyed.
[0080] The three-layer laminates of this invention can be formed using a variety of the
afore mentioned backing layers and current distributors. The following examples further
illustrate their preparation and actual testing in corrosive alkaline environments
and at current densities such as are employed in chlor-alkali cells, fuel cells, batteries,
etc.
Example 5
[0081] (Forming laminated electrodes from the matrix active layers of Examples 1 to 3 and
testing them in alkaline media at current densities of 250 mA/cm
2 and higher)
[0082] The active layers prepared in accordance with Examples 1 to 3 respectively, were
each laminated to a current distributor and a backing sheet of sodium carbonated-loaded
PTFE prepared as follows:
Two hundred cubic centimeters of isopropyl alcohol were poured into blender. Then
49 grams of DuPont 6A polytetrafluoroethylene were placed in the blender and the PTFE-alcohol
dispersion was blended for approximately one minute. The resulting slurry had a thick,
pasty consistency. Then another 100 cm3 of isopropyl alcohol were added in the blender and the mixture was blended for an
additional two minutes.
[0083] Then 91 grams of particulate sodium carbonate in isopropanol having an average particle
size of approximately 3.5 micrometers were added to the blender. This PTFE-sodium
carbonate mixture was then blended in the blender for 3 minutes followed by a higher
speed blending for an additional one minute. The resulting PTFE- sodium carbonate
slurry was then poured from the blender onto a Buchner funnel, filtered and then placed
in an oven at 80°C where it was dried for 3 hours resulting in 136.2 grams yield of
PTFE-sodium carbonate mixture. This mixture contained approximately 35 weight parts
of PTFE and 65 weight parts of sodium carbonate.
[0084] This mixture was mildly fibrillated as described above.
[0085] After fibrillating, which compresses and greatly attenuates the PTFE, the fibrillated
material is chopped to a fine dry powder. The extent of chopping can be varied as
long as the material is finely chopped.
[0086] The chopped PTFE-NaC0
3 mix is fed to approx. 15 cm diameter chrome-plated steel rolls heated to about 80°C.
Typically these rolls are set at a gap of 0.2 millimeters for this operation. The
sheets are formed directly in one pass and are ready for use as backing layers in
forming electrodes, e.g., oxygen cathodes, with no further processing beyond cutting,
trimming to size and the like.
[0087] The current distributor was 0.1 to 0.13 mm diameter nickel woven wire mesh having
about 10 micrometers thick silver plating and the woven strand arrangement tabulated
below. The distributor was positioned on one active layer side while the backing layer
was placed on the other side of the active layer.
[0088] The lamination was performed in a hydraulic press at 100°C to 130°C and using pressures
of 6.1 10' to 1.21 10
8 N/m
2 for several minutes. These laminates were then hot soaked in ethylene glycol at 75°C
for 20 minutes before water washing at 65°C for 18 hours and then dried.
[0089] The laminates were then placed in respective half cells for testing against a counter
electrode in 30% aqueous sodium hydroxide at temperatures of 70° to 80°C with an air
flow of 4 times the theoretical requirement for an air cathode and a current density
of 300 mA/cm
2. The testing results and other pertinent notations are given below.

[0090] It should be noted here that in each of these "matrix" electrodes the approximate
concentration of PTFE in the active layer mix is only about 12% by weight while still
achieving the combined requirements of conductivity, strength, permeability and longevity,
long sought in air-breathing electrodes.
Example 6
[0091] A laminated electrode was formed using the PTFE sodium carbonate one pass backing
layer, the active layer of Example 1 and a prior art type porous sintered nickel plaque
current distributor (Dual Porosity Lot No. 502-62-46). The matrix active layer was
positioned on the coarse side of said plaque and the PTFE/sodium carbonate backing
layer was placed on top of the other surface of the active layer. This sandwich was
pressed at 1.21 10
8 N/m
2 and 115°C for 3 minutes after which it was hot soaked in ethylene glycol at 75°C
for 20 minutes followed by water washing at 65°C for 18 hours. This air electrode
was operated at 4 times theoretical air and 250 mA/cm
2 in 30% NaOH at 70°C and operated satisfactorily for 17 days before failure.
[0092] Several of the features mentioned above as being useful in conjunction with the electrode
active layer of the invention to form gas diffusion electrodes are individually claimed
in concurrent European patent applications. In particular, European patent application
No. 81 305 086.1 (EP 0 052 446), European patent application No. 81 305092.9 (EP 0
051 438), European patent application No. 81 305 093.7 (EP 0 051 439), and European
patent application No. 81 305 094.5 (EP 0 051 440).