Angus
Pedersen‡
ab,
Jinil
Pandya‡
b,
Grazia
Leonzio
bc,
Alexey
Serov
d,
Andrea
Bernardi
be,
Ifan E. L.
Stephens
a,
Maria-Magdalena
Titirici
bf,
Camille
Petit
b and
Benoît
Chachuat
*be
aDepartment of Materials, Royal School of Mines, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK
bDepartment of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK. E-mail: b.chachuat@imperial.ac.uk
cDepartment of Mechanical, Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Cagliari, via Marengo 2, 09123 Cagliari, Italy
dElectrification and Energy Infrastructures Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
eThe Sargent Centre for Process Systems Engineering, Imperial College London, SW7 2AZ, London, UK
fAdvanced Institute for Materials Research (WPI-AIMR), Tohoku University, 2-1-1 Katahira, Aobaku, Sendai, Miyagi 980-8577, Japan
First published on 3rd November 2023
Sluggish kinetics in the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) require significant quantities of expensive Pt-based nanoparticles on carbon (Pt/C) at the cathode of proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs). This catalyst requirement hinders their large-scale implementation. Single atom Fe in N-doped C (Fe–N–C) electrocatalysts offer the best non-Pt-based ORR activities to date, but their environmental impacts have not been studied and their production costs are rarely quantified. Herein, we report a comparative life-cycle assessment and techno-economic analysis of replacing Pt/C with Fe–N–C at the cathode of an 80 kW PEMFC stack. In the baseline scenario (20 gPt/Cvs. 690 gFe–N–C), we estimate that Fe–N–C could reduce damages on ecosystems and human health by 88–90% and 30–44%, respectively, while still increasing global warming potential by 53–92% and causing a comparable impact on resource depletion. The environmental impacts of Pt/C predominantly arise from the Pt precursor while those of Fe–N–C are presently dominated by the electricity consumption. The monetized costs of environmental externalities for both Fe–N–C and Pt/C catalysts exceed their respective direct production costs. Based on catalyst performance with learning curve analysis at 500000 PEMFC stacks per annum, we estimate replacing Pt/C with Fe–N–C would increase PEMFC stack cost from 13.8 to 41.6 USD per kW. The cost increases despite a reduction in cathode catalyst production cost from 3.41 to 0.79 USD per kW (excluding environmental externalities). To be cost-competitive with a Pt-based PEMFC stack delivering 2020 US Department of Energy target of 1160 mW cm−2 (at 0.657 V), the same stack with an Fe–N–C cathode would need to reach 874 mW cm−2, equivalent to a 200% performance improvement. These findings demonstrate the need for continued Fe–N–C activity development with sustainable synthesis routes in mind to replace Pt-based cathode catalyst in PEMFCs. Based on forecasting scenarios of fuel cell vehicle deployment targets, we find that Pt consumption would be constrained by Pt supply.
Pt-based nanoparticles on carbon (Pt/C) catalysts are commonly implemented in commercial PEMFCs to facilitate the electrochemical reactions.4 The reaction kinetics at the cathode, where the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) occurs, are far more sluggish than at the anode and, as a result, the cathode has previously required 80–90% of the total Pt within the PEMFC.5 Hence, Pt-based cathode catalysts have been projected as the largest single component cost of an 80 kW PEMFC stack at production rates of 500000 stacks per year.6 The price volatility of Pt and subsequent catalyst cost sensitivity would also heavily impact fuel cell costs, making wider-scale commercialization difficult.7 In terms of Pt supply, South Africa provided 65–74% and Russia 10–14% of the world's Pt between 2017 and 2021.8 Moreover, industrial recycling of Pt has remained low to date (total <30%, combustion automotive <55%).8,9 This dependency on fresh Pt supplies is unfavorable since highly reliant on global supply chains and trade agreements. As such, in the UK and EU, Pt is considered a critical raw material due to its high global supply risk and economic vulnerability.9,10
Research efforts have been directed at replacing Pt from the PEMFC cathode, also with a view to bringing PEMFC system costs down to the 30 USD per kW target set by the US Department of Energy (DOE).6,11 The most promising alternative catalysts are those based on metal single atoms coordinated to nitrogen within a conductive carbon scaffold, classified as M–N–C, where M refers to a transition metal (Fe, Mn and/or Co).12 Of these, Fe–N–C catalysts show the highest ORR activity,13 and have the potential for low production cost, while relying only on highly abundant and widely accessible elements. The activity and stability of Fe–N–C catalysts in PEMFCs have recently improved substantially.14 However, state-of-the-art Fe–N–C synthesis require several steps usually with two energy intensive pyrolysis steps. Simple, scalable approaches to single atom Fe–N–C synthesis are also available,15,16 but this is typically detrimental to the ORR activity. Companies such as Pajarito Powder, LLC (USA)17,18 Nisshinbo Holdings Inc. (Japan)19,20 and lately Celcibus AB (Sweden),21 have invested in commercial development of Fe–N–C catalysts. Pajarito Powder recently demonstrated initial H2–air PEMFC performance with their Fe–N–C cathode catalyst comparable to commercial Pt/C, despite degradation still falling short of US DOE targets (60–119 mV vs. <30 mV loss US DOE target at 0.8 A cm−2 after 30000 cycles between open circuit potential and 0.6 V).17
With the technology readiness level and performance of Fe–N–C catalysts continually improving, it is important to assess their environmental impact and commercial viability compared to Pt-based catalysts through life-cycle assessment (LCA) and techno-economic analysis (TEA). Both LCA and TEA have been conducted on PEMFCs, including some analysis of the critical materials,22 yet with a limited focus on the Pt-based electrocatalyst.23 Stropnik et al. estimated that a mere 0.75 g of Pt contributes around 60% of the total environmental impact of manufacturing a 1 kW PEMFC system.24 In terms of global warming potential (GWP), this is not surprising since Pt production emits ∼10000 kg CO2-eq per kg in comparison to only ∼1 kg CO2-eq per kg for Fe.25 Stropnik and co-workers subsequently found for a 48 kW PEMFC stack and in an optimistic scenario that climate change impact could be reduced by 54% if 95% of the Pt were to be recycled.26 Recycled Pt has been demonstrated in PEMFC,27 and EU reports estimate that 76% of Pt in end-of-life PEMFCs is already recoverable using laboratory-scale processes.28,29
Another recent EU report comparing a carbon nanotube-based Fe–N–C and Pt/C cathode catalyst predicted that the GWP, human toxicity, abiotic depletion, and eutrophication impacts of Fe–N–C could be greater than those of Pt/C.30 The same report found that the fluorine-containing Nafion™ membrane and ionomer could be the dominating component for environmental impacts for comparable performance systems.30 Nevertheless, alternative membranes have recently been developed such as Pemion™ that eliminate environmental concerns of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, which could soon be banned in the EU.
In 2005, Gasteiger et al. calculated that for a costless Pt-free cathode catalyst to be economically viable in a PEMFC, it would need to have at least 10% of the activity of Pt under equivalent conditions.31 While this has been achieved by Fe–N–C catalysts in the meantime, one also needs to account for the material and manufacturing costs of these catalysts. In 2015, a TEA comparison at 500000 80 kW PEMFC systems per year between a polyaniline-based Fe–N–C catalyst with low material cost of 74–129 USD per kg and a specialized Pt-based alloy catalyst at ∼41000 USD per kg concluded that the Fe–N–C would require a power density improvement from 330 mW cm−2 to 475 mW cm−2 at 0.5 V to compete with the Pt-based catalyst, but this was based purely on material costs.32 Moreover, to the best of our knowledge, the environmental life cycle impacts of Fe–N–C catalyst production have not been quantified yet, let alone comparisons between the environmental impacts of Pt/C and Fe–N–C electrocatalysts in a PEMFC cathode.
Herein, we conduct a comparative techno-economic and environmental analysis of replacing Pt/C electrocatalyst with a Fe–N–C electrocatalyst for the ORR in an 80 kW PEMFC stack, considering only the initial ORR activity and neglecting degradation. We conduct a cradle-to-gate LCA, including the propagation of key process uncertainties on predicted environmental impacts in a sensitivity analysis, and we investigate a range of possible future scenarios. We also perform a detailed cost analysis of both catalysts under a large-scale deployment scenario of 500000 PEMFC stacks per annum using a learning curve method.
Herein, we apply LCA to quantify and compare the environmental impacts of manufacturing Pt/C and Fe–N–C electrocatalysts for use in a PEMFC cathode. Of all the PEMFC stack components, such focus on the cathode electrocatalyst (Fig. 1a) is motivated by its large repercussion on PEMFC efficiency, cost, lifetime, and environmental impact, with substantial ongoing research on displacing Pt-based cathode catalyst. The two electrocatalysts are compared on a dry basis, so both ionomer and inks for depositing catalysts are ignored in the LCA. The assessment is conducted using OpenLCA 1.11 and the database ecoinvent 3.6.36 The LCA comprises four phases per the ISO standards (14040:2006 and 14044:2006/AMD 2:2020): (1) goal and scope definition, (2) inventory analysis, (3) impact assessment, (4) interpretation.37
Fig. 1 (a) PEMFC stack component hierarchy, with highlighted focus on the cathode catalyst. (b) System boundary of the PEMFC cathode electrocatalyst LCA. |
We adopt a cradle-to-gate scope for the LCA (Fig. 1b), which includes all processes from raw material extraction to the electrocatalyst production and where allocation is not required since Pt/C and Fe–N–C are the sole products. The use phase of the electrocatalysts is accounted for through setting the functional unit as the mass of cathode catalyst (grams) needed for a PEMFC stack to provide power of 80 kW at 0.657 V, including the effect of electrocatalyst amount in a post hoc scenario analysis. Despite Fe–N–C currently being less stable than Pt/C, Fe–N–C stability is rapidly improving14 so we make the assumption herein that Fe–N–C will eventually reach equivalent operation lifetimes to Pt/C. Regarding the end-of-life, while our baseline scenario assumes no recycling for the spent electrocatalysts, the effect of Pt recycling is investigated as part of the post hoc scenario analysis instead. Incorporating more details on the treatment of the spent electrocatalysts, degradation of the catalyst or PEMFC lifetime into the LCA is beyond the scope of this paper and left for future research.
The main performance characteristics of the analyzed baseline 80 kW PEMFCs are summarized in Table 1. The Pt/C cathode electrocatalyst is based on the 2020 US DOE target and performance of 0.125 mgPt cm−2 for light duty fuel cell vehicles using PEMFC technology,7,38 resulting in around 20 g of Pt/C catalyst per functional unit (80 kW); refer to section A of the ESI for details.† For the Fe–N–C electrocatalyst, PEMFC performance is assumed equivalent to a Pajarito Powder Fe–N–C catalyst with 290 mW cm−2,17 leading to an estimated 690 g of Fe–N–C catalyst per functional unit (see section A of ESI†). The baseline scenario, therefore, compares 20 g of Pt/C against 690 g of Fe–N–C.
Parameter | Pt/C | Fe–N–C |
---|---|---|
Power density at 0.657 V (mW cm−2) | 1160 | 290 |
Cathode catalyst loading (mgPt cm−2 or mgFe–N–C cm−2) | 0.125 | 2.5 |
Active cells (−) | 380 | 11035 |
Cell active area (cm2) | 185 | 25 |
Total cathode catalyst required (g) | 20 | 690 |
Fig. 2 Process diagrams with material and energy inventories to produce baseline (a) 20 g Pt/C, (b) 690 g Fe–N–C. |
Initial lab-scale (55 mg Pt/C production) values of sodium hydroxide, ethylene glycol, chloroplatinic acid, hydrochloric acid, deionized water, and carbon black are for 50 wt% Pt/C39 and adjusted to 46 wt% Pt/C, while acetone is from scaling an 8 g Pt/C lab process.40 Energy inputs are from a previously reported simulated 1 kg Pt/C manufacturing process,35,42 scaled down to 20 g, and assuming 90% efficiency of electric heat ovens and excluding the carbon support precursor processing. The reactants are scaled in stoichiometric ratios with 20% relative reduction in solvents applied during scaling.43 Material losses in Pt/C production, reported to be ∼3% in manufacturing quotes, are ignored. All unreacted inputs are considered waste chemicals in the outlet stream. The foreground inventories for baseline 20 g Pt/C electrocatalyst are summarized in Table 2 (left column) and reported on the process diagram in Fig. 2a (further details in Table S2†). The lack of data for chloroplatinic acid in Ecoinvent 3.6 is circumvented through creating a separate process based on literature data (eqn (S1) and Table S1†).7
Pt/C (20 g) | Fe–N–C (690 g) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Input | Amount | Input | Amount |
Acetone (g) | 768 | Activated silica (kg) | 1.38 |
Carbon black (g) | 10.0 | Hydrogen fluoride (kg) | 2.21 |
Chloroplatinic acid (g) | 17.7 | Iron nitrate nonahydrate (kg) | 0.345 |
Ethylene glycol (kg) | 2.56 | Nicarbazin (kg) | 3.46 |
Sodium hydroxide (g) | 23.3 | Water, deionised (kg) | 138 |
Water, deionised (kg) | 39.7 | Electricity (MJ) | 5393 |
Hydrochloric acid (g) | 318 | ||
Electricity (MJ) | 4.43 |
Output | Amount | Output | Amount |
---|---|---|---|
Acetone, waste (g) | 768 | Silica, waste (kg) | 1.38 |
Hydrochloric acid, waste (g) | 318 | Fe–N–C Catalyst (g) | 690 |
Pt/C (g) | 20 | Hydrogen fluoride, waste (kg) | 2.21 |
Sodium Hydroxide, waste (g) | 23.3 | Nicarbazin, waste (kg) | 2.76 |
Wastewater (kg) | 39.7 | Wastewater (kg) | 138 |
Ethylene glycol, waste (kg) | 2.56 |
All energy inputs are scaled linearly from 25 g Fe–N–C production, obtained from laboratory data (Table S5†), and by assuming that the whole production process, including large-scale furnaces, could be electrified at scale. The reactants are scaled in stoichiometric ratios and water as solvent is scaled with a 20% relative reduction.43 Material losses during production are neglected, aside from during pyrolysis. Based on expert opinion and previous laboratory data from the University of New Mexico, 80% of nicarbazin precursor is assumed to be wasted in the Fe–N–C process due to the initial pyrolysis. N2 gas flow during pyrolysis is not considered due to the low environmental impact found in OpenLCA. The amount of required HF is calculated based on the amount of silica (eqn (S2)†), with an extra 20% added to ensure complete consumption of silica. Since SiF4 is unavailable in ecoinvent 3.6, its environmental impact is assimilated to that of HF, under the assumption of equal input and output flows of HF. All output streams other than the catalyst are treated as a waste in the baseline scenario (see Scenario subsection below). The foreground inventories for baseline 690 g Fe–N–C are summarized in Table 2 (right column) and reported on Fig. 2b (further details in Table S6†). Data for iron nitrate nonahydrate and nicarbazin are also unavailable in ecoinvent 3.6. For the former, a separate process is created, with inputs determined using weight distribution data (Table S3†). For the latter, an equimolar mix of 2-nitroaniline and 2-pyridinol is assumed to be equivalent to the nicarbazin precursor (Table S4†). Any energy inputs for producing these two precursors are furthermore omitted.
The midpoint indicators are further aggregated into endpoint categories for three areas of protection: human health, expressed in terms of disability-adjusted life-years (DALY), measures the number of years that a person is disabled after a disease or accident; ecosystem quality measures the local species loss integrated over time (expressed in species × year); and resource scarcity monetizes the burdens attributed to future mineral and fossil resource extraction (expressed in US$ 2013). The last two endpoint indicators are quantified again using the ReCiPe 2016 methodology. To account for the impact of HF, the human health indicator is calculated by converting point units in ReCiPe 2008 to DALY in ReCiPe 2016 (world normalization factor of 73.3 and average weighting factor of 400).51 The selected characterization methods for both midpoint and endpoint impacts are summarized in Table 3.
Impact | Category | Characteristic model | Units |
---|---|---|---|
Mid-point | Global warming potential | ReCiPe 2016 | kg CO2-eq |
Acidification potential | CML 2001 | kg SO2-eq | |
Fossil resource scarcity | ReCiPe 2016 | kg oil-eq | |
Marine eutrophication | ReCiPe 2016 | kg N-eq | |
Freshwater eutrophication | ReCiPe 2016 | kg P-eq | |
Human toxicity potential | CML 2001 | kg 1,4-DCB-eq | |
Mineral resource scarcity | ReCiPe 2016 | kg Cu-eq | |
End-point | Human health | ReCiPe 2008 | DALY |
Ecosystem quality | ReCiPe 2016 | species × year | |
Resource | ReCiPe 2016 | USD 2013 |
Alongside quantifying the environmental impacts, our assessment considers their monetary valuation as externalities, or monetisation in short. This procedure translates the endpoint environmental burdens into monetary units, thereby enabling a direct comparison both between categories and with manufacturing costs. Weidema and coworkers52,53 first developed monetisation factors for the human health damage categories, based on the annual income generated through extending a person's life by one year, and later extended the approach by extrapolating from human health to ecosystem damage. The monetisation factors (Table S7†) used herein are those by Dong et al.,54 which are based on the hierarchist perspective.
Yi = AXi−r | (1) |
F = 2−r | (2) |
Typical values for F range between 74–95%.63,64 We adopt a nominal F value of 86.4% for the catalysts, which is based on baseline Fe–N–C (690 g) reaching the equivalent production cost of the 380 g Fe–N–C + muffle furnace scenario at 500000 stacks per year. The values from Mock and Schmid64 are applied for the rest of PEMFC components. We estimated the production costs for Pt/C and Fe–N–C from quotes from Alibaba and other relevant manufacturers, with processing costs based on calculated utility consumption and factors for plant costs from industry knowledge (Tables S10 and S11†).
For Pt/C cathode catalyst, a simple process achieving 2020 US DOE target performance is modelled with the market price of bulk precursors and electricity applied. Since the state-of-the-art de-alloyed Pt-based cathode PEMFC catalysts that meet the US DOE performance targets possess higher material and processing costs, the calculated Pt/C cathode and anode catalyst process costs are applied as the value at 500000 stacks per year in the learning curve (Table S12†). We calculated the Pt/C anode catalyst cost assuming an equivalent production Pt/C process, but with 0.025 mgPt cm−2 loading (cost divided by five). We based the costs of the other PEMFC components in the Pt/C system at 1000 stacks per year on previous values from James et al. for their 2020 scenario.7 For comparison, we also conducted a separate learning curve calculation based on the cost of a PtCo/C cathode catalyst from James et al.7 (Table S13†).
For Fe–N–C cathode catalyst, market prices for bulk precursors and electricity were also used. We based the cost at 1000 stacks per year on material and process costs from the modelled Fe–N–C catalyst synthesis. We selected the production rate as 1000 stacks per year as we assumed that the performance of Fe–N–C can be improved, and thus the production costs reduced, at higher production rates. The total required coating area is 3.9-times greater for Fe–N–C than Pt/C due to the lower power output of the catalyst. Therefore, we scaled the cost of Fe–N–C PEMFC components at 1000 stacks per year in proportion with the increased surface area in the Fe–N–C system relative to the Pt/C system (Table S14†).
The LCA results for all three endpoint damage categories of human health, ecosystems quality, and resource scarcity are summarized on the bar charts in Fig. 4a–c for the baseline Pt/C (20 g) and Fe–N–C (690 g) scenario (see also Table S22†). They depict a different reality than the midpoint indicators, whereby the Fe–N–C catalyst clearly outperforms Pt/C in terms of ecosystems quality (−89%) and human health (−36%) and does marginally better in terms of resource scarcity (−9%). The midpoint contributions to endpoints (Table S19†) can help understand this shift.
Regarding ecosystems quality, the impacts of both land use (4.6 × 10−5 species × year) and acidification potential (0.7 × 10−5 species × year) associated with Pt/C production far exceed the dominant impact of Fe–N–C production due to global warming (0.3 × 10−5 species × year). In terms of human health, the larger impact of particulate matter formation for Pt/C (1.4 × 10−3 DALY) overpowers the larger climate change impact for Fe–N–C (1.0 × 10−3 DALY), while human toxicity is also lower for Fe–N–C after accounting for cancerous human toxicity (conversion factor 3.3 × 10−6 DALY per kg 1,4-DCB eq) alongside non-cancerous human toxicity (conversion factor 2.3 × 10−7 DALY kg−1 1,4-DCB eq) caused by HF alone. Finally, regarding resource scarcity, the environmental burden caused by Pt mining on mineral resources is balanced by the larger burden of Fe–N–C production on fossil resources due to its much larger energy requirement.
These conclusions are confirmed by the inter-quartile ranges in predicted endpoint indicators, which show no overlap between Fe–N–C and Pt/C in the human health (Fig. 4a) and ecosystems quality (Fig. 4b) categories, and a limited overlap in the resource scarcity (Fig. 4c) category. The global sensitivity analysis finds that the dominant uncertainty factors are the amounts of chloroplatinic acid and electricity for Pt/C production (Table S20†), as well as the amounts of electricity and, to a lesser extent, HF for Fe–N–C production (Table S21†). Though it should be noted that end-point indicators are subject to larger uncertainty than mid-indicators,69 especially regarding uncertainties in the life-cycle (background) emissions and the LCIA characterization factors, which were not quantified here. It would thus be important, as part of future work, to study in greater depth the burden-shifting occurring between the global warming impact (greater for Fe–N–C) and both end-point impacts of human health and ecosystems quality (greater for Pt/C).
The alternative scenarios of Fe–N–C and Pt/C are compared to baseline scenarios for endpoint categories in Fig. 4d–f (see Table S22† for breakdown). This is complemented with a similar comparison for midpoint categories in Fig. S1† (with breakdown in Table S17†). For Fe–N–C production, the scenario with muffle furnace presents the largest improvement potential in all three damage areas of human health (−48%), ecosystems quality (−70%) and resources (−68%). This was expected given the dominant burden of electricity consumption on Fe–N–C impacts, but nonetheless interesting that using a muffle furnace could present even greater benefits than reducing the amount of Fe–N–C catalyst to 380 g from the baseline scenario. Swapping global to EU electricity supply could also present significant environmental benefits in terms of human health (−26%), ecosystems quality (−25%) and resources (−35%) due to the reduced carbon intensity. Although this could increase both freshwater (+16%) and marine (+11%) eutrophication potentials at the mid-point level due to the higher share of brown coal (lignite) in current EU supplies compared to the global average.49 The large impact of electricity mix on the environmental performance of Fe–N–C production is further exemplified on Fig. S2 and S3† (with breakdown in Tables S18 and S23†), where a mix with high share of renewables and low carbon intensity such as Sweden could dramatically reduce all three damage areas of human health (−76%), ecosystems quality (−72%) and resources (−81%), while a mix heavily reliant on coal such as Poland would significantly worsen the impacts on human health (+35%) and ecosystems quality (+69%). By contrast, the scenario without HF would bring more modest benefits, with a 16% reduction in human health impacts compared to the baseline scenario and marginal impact on other endpoints. At the midpoint level, the largest benefit of eliminating HF is on human toxicity (−88%) and acidification potential (−55%), but these two categories do not carry much weight when aggregated into the human health endpoint indicator (compare Table S19†). Regarding Pt/C production, reducing the amount of catalyst or increasing Pt recycling has a very significant benefit in all environmental impact categories, which agrees with the dominant burden of chloroplatinic acid on Pt/C impacts. Within the best-case, 75% Pt recycling in particular, reductions from the baseline Pt/C scenario are close to 75% in all endpoint and midpoint impact categories. The 75% Pt recycling scenario is also more favorable than any of the Fe–N–C improvement scenarios in terms of impacts on human health and resources, although Fe–N–C still carries significantly less burden on endpoint ecosystems quality and midpoint acidification potential and mineral resource scarcity compared to any of the Pt/C scenarios. It is also noteworthy that the predicted impacts on human health and resources in the muffle furnace scenario of Fe–N–C production remain within 20–30% of those of the optimistic 75% Pt recycling scenario, confirming the large improvement potential of Fe–N–C catalyst.
Learning curve analysis of Pt/C and Fe–N–C is shown in Fig. 5a and b (see Tables S12 and S14† for details), with Fe–N–C and Pt/C PEMFC component breakdown shown in Fig. S5.† At 500000 stacks per year, the Pt/C cathode makes up 25% of the PEMFC stack cost and 3.4 USD per kW, while Fe–N–C makes up only 2% of stack cost and is 0.79 USD per kW. This result relates to the total PEMFC stack cost being far lower for Pt/C than Fe–N–C cathode stacks, at 13.8 USD per kW compared to 41.6 USD per kW, respectively. This difference is caused by the 3.9-times greater required surface area of the Fe–N–C cathode system, which was assumed to increase the costs of other components by the same factor. This increased area completely negates the benefit of the reduced cathode catalyst cost in the Fe–N–C system. For instance, in a Fe–N–C cathode based PEMFC, the Pt-based anode could end up using more Pt than in an all Pt-based PEMFC, if the Pt consumption at the anode scaled with area.
Fig. 5 Learning curve analysis of 80 kW PEMFC stack cost with production rate for baseline cathode catalysts with F = 86.4% (a) Fe–N–C (690 gFeNC). (b) Pt/C (20 gPt/C). (c). Variation of PEMFC stack cost at 500000 stacks with power density for different F values for Fe–N–C compared to target Pt-based 80 kW PEMFC systems, including PtCo/C of James et al. (2018)7 (d) Breakdown of the total process and environmental production costs for baseline Fe–N–C (690 gFe–N–C), Pt/C (20 gPt/C), Fe–N–C 380 gFe–N–C + muffle furnace and 75% Pt recycling scenarios. Box and whisker plots are drawn using the endpoint uncertainty scenarios, with monetization applied. |
The PEMFC stack cost is therefore sensitive to the Fe–N–C power density performance, as well as the F value applied, which describes how much the production cost is reduced upon doubling the cumulative production (Fig. S6†). For the modelled system at F = 86.4% for the catalysts, the baseline Fe–N–C would need to reach a power density of 874 mW cm−2 at 0.657 V, equivalent to a 200% improvement (reduction to 230 gFe–N–C) to become cost competitive with the Pt/C based cathode at 500000 stack per annum (Fig. 4c). At F = 74% for all Fe–N–C based PEMFC components, only a 34% improvement to 0.392 mW cm−2 is required to reach equal costs to Pt/C based system. However, the Fe–N–C stack with F = 95% cannot achieve the same Pt/C stack cost (with F = 86.4%) for the power density range considered here. A simple and cheap Pt/C cathode process was modelled here; however, to achieve US DOE performance targets, de-alloyed Pt-based catalysts are typically required. Therefore, the cost of an equivalent performance but more expensive Pt-based de-alloyed cathode catalyst (PtCo/C) was also evaluated (Table S13 and Fig. S7†). De-alloyed PtCo/C is more expensive due to additional processing steps.7 At 500000 stacks per year, the higher cost of the PtCo/C precursor (3.93 USD per kW), which makes up 27.4% of component costs, results in PEMFC stack cost of 14.3 USD per kW. This is lower than the 15.5 USD per kW calculated by James et al. for a 2020 PEMFC auto system with PtCo/C,7 owing to the learning curve rate applied here. For baseline Fe–N–C to reach equivalent cost to the PtCo/C cathode PEMFC considered here at 500000 stacks per year would require reaching a power density of 0.842 W cm−2 at 0.657 V, or 0.781 W cm−2 for the PtCo/C system of James et al. (Fig. 5c).7
Incorporating monetisation of environmental impacts into the catalyst material and processing costs has a significant impact on the cathode catalyst cost (Fig. 5d). Though it is worth reiterating that the monetisation factors used (Table S7†) carry large uncertainty, so the monetised impacts may only provide an order of magnitude estimate.52 For all catalyst scenarios, the environmental externalities are higher than the material and processing costs. For baseline Fe–N–C, these environmental externalities add up to 5.50 USD per kW, while material and processing costs are 2.92 USD per kW. The case is even more severe for baseline Pt/C, with environmental externality costs of 18.23 USD per kW, against material and process costs of 3.41 USD per kW. Pt/C has a much larger impact on ecosystem quality than Fe–N–C, which leads to the largest monetised externality of 12.03 USD per kW (Fig. 3). Taking improved Fe–N–C (380 gFe–N–C + muffle furnace) scenario leads to a reduced total process and environmental externality cost of 2.10 USD per kW. Additionally, for 75% Pt recycling scenario, the total cost falls to 5.41 USD per kW. Costs associated with labour, fixed costs, overheads, and depreciations are negligible for Pt/C due to only 20 gPt/C production required for an 80 kW PEMFC, whereas 690 g of Fe–N–C results in 0.49 USD per kW for these costs. Moreover, electricity costs for baseline Fe–N–C are significant at 1.98 USD per kW, and insignificant for Pt/C, although Fe–N–C electricity requirements can be reduced to 0.28 USD per kW for the 380 g Fe–N–C with muffle furnace.
Finally, we consider if Pt supply can meet future scenarios of Pt demand from PEMFC deployment for FCEV production. This topic has previously recently been considered in detail,70,71 and we here provide a new perspective on this topic (Fig. S8 and S9†). We based our criterion on Pt demand not exceeding 10% of supply for a new technology.8 If the sum of global Government targets for FCEV deployment by 2030 (2.5 million FCEV) were to be produced in a single year, Pt consumption would still not exceed 10% Pt supply based on US DOE 2020 Pt specific power density targets values, even with zero Pt recycling. If EU 2030 Pt specific power density and Pt recycling targets were met, Pt supply constraints would not be a limiting factor in PEMFC production, even if the highest 2040 target of FCEV on the road (15 million FCEV67) were to be produced in one year. Nevertheless, this analysis does not factor in that the majority of Pt is produced by a single country, South Africa, and the supply of Pt could therefore be subject to disruptions.
The heating temperature, heating rate, time, and number of pyrolysis steps for Fe–N–C catalysts needs to be carefully considered, since this energy intensive processes makes up a significant share of all environmental impact categories through the electricity consumption. James et al.32 estimated that the manufacturing costs in a poly-aniline derived Fe–N–C, produced at 500000 systems per year, are largely derived from the acid washing process (49%), while the carbon support makes up the most significant material cost (34%). At this production rate, they estimated the Fe–N–C cost at 74–129 USD per kg,32 which is comparable to our study(90.8 USD per kg with F = 86.4%). In their study the 1-hour pyrolysis in a rotary kiln only contributed 3% of manufacturing costs, while we scaled the electricity input for Fe–N–C manufacturing process with pyrolysis steps based on a tube furnace process here. In particular, we found that vast reductions in electricity requirement, and therefore cost and environmental impacts of Fe–N–C, could be achieved by using a muffle furnace (Fig. 3d–f). Further energy reductions could also made when producing Fe–N–C at scale using heat integration methods such as pinch analysis. These reductions would lead the low technology readiness of Fe–N–C catalyst to reach more comparable electricity consumption to the high technology readiness optimized Pt/C process.
With regards to the carbon intensity of electricity, it is worth noting that the EU aims for its electricity production to reach carbon-neutrality by 2040. In this scenario, the impact of Fe–N–C on climate change, human health, ecosystems quality and resources all together would all become negligible compared to those of Pt/C. Already in countries with a high share of renewables in the electricity mix, such as Sweden (where commercial Fe–N–C manufacturer Celcibus AB is based), the environmental impacts of Fe–N–C production would be greatly mitigated (Fig. S2 and S3†). The impact on human toxicity could furthermore be avoided through alternative production methods (without HF, Fig. S1e†).62
Considering degradation, Stropnik et al. recently developed LCA models that incorporate degradation effects,73 and James et al. recently incorporated durability adjusted operating conditions for TEA models.74 We did not consider degradation of the PEMFC here. The reason for this is practical light duty automotive application would need to reach the US DOE target of 8000 h,38 or 7000 h according to EU 2030 targets,61 while to date high activity Fe–N–C have only been demonstrated for 100s of hours in PEMFCs.14 Nevertheless, recent work suggests Fe–N–C catalysts can be partially regenerated in situ for short periods with simple electrochemical protocols,75 rather than requiring an ex situ recovery process as required for Pt. Fe–N–C based catalysts could also find applications in small, short term back-up power applications (at high production volumes), such as the emergency power/Wi-Fi backpack recently demonstrated by Ballard System Ltd and Nisshinbo.76
Considering Pt-based PEMFCs, over an order of magnitude reduction has been achieved in the past three decades (Fig. S9†). For instance, Toyota has achieved 72% reduction from 0.93 ± 0.25 to 0.26 ± 0.07 gPt kW−1 in their 2008 PEMFC model to 2014 1st generation Mirai, and a further 58% reduction to 0.11 ± 0.03 gPt kW−1 in their 2020 2nd generation Mirai.4 The EU targets a reduction in PEMFC Pt content to 0.05 gPt kW−1 by 2030,61 although increased Pt instability at these low future target loadings may prevent their realization.77 Nevertheless, combining ideal scenarios of Pt reduction and recycling targets being met would result in minimal environmental impacts.
In terms of learning curve analysis, typical F values range between 74–95%63,65 and 86.4% was selected as the nominal value here. We highlighted in the Results section that the F value has a significant impact on the stack costs. It is difficult to predict what F value would be realized; however, based on the previous minimum F = 74%, an 80 kW Fe–N–C based PEMFC would need to improve at least 34% from 290 mW cm−2 to become cost comparative with Pt/C based delivering 1160 mW cm−2. Current non-precious metal hydrogen evolution catalysts for proton exchange membrane electrolysers also show a similar requirement of improved performance under most operating regimes to replace precious metal catalysts.78
Future work could consider the effect on Fe–N–C LCA for other common synthetic strategies, such as recent state-of-the-art Fe–N–C derived from zeolitic imidazolate framework 8.14 Broader environmental contextualization in terms of planetary boundaries or comparison to other technologies, such as batteries, would also provide further critical insights. Future comparison of the use and disposal phase of the catalysts could be developed based on degradation73 and recycling.27 Design for manufacture and assembly methodology could be used to track annual cost impact of catalyst developments.74
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3gc03206j |
‡ Angus Pedersen and Jinil Pandya have equal contributions. |
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