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Dive into the research topics where Andreas Nenning is active.

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Featured researches published by Andreas Nenning.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Enhancing Electrochemical Water-Splitting Kinetics by Polarization-Driven Formation of Near-Surface Iron(0): An In Situ XPS Study on Perovskite-Type Electrodes

Alexander K. Opitz; Andreas Nenning; Christoph Rameshan; Raffael Rameshan; Raoul Blume; Michael Hävecker; Axel Knop-Gericke; Günther Rupprechter; Jürgen Fleig; Bernhard Klötzer

In the search for optimized cathode materials for high-temperature electrolysis, mixed conducting oxides are highly promising candidates. This study deals with fundamentally novel insights into the relation between surface chemistry and electrocatalytic activity of lanthanum ferrite based electrolysis cathodes. For this means, near-ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP-XPS) and impedance spectroscopy experiments were performed simultaneously on electrochemically polarized La0.6Sr0.4FeO3−δ (LSF) thin film electrodes. Under cathodic polarization the formation of Fe0 on the LSF surface could be observed, which was accompanied by a strong improvement of the electrochemical water splitting activity of the electrodes. This correlation suggests a fundamentally different water splitting mechanism in presence of the metallic iron species and may open novel paths in the search for electrodes with increased water splitting activity.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

Ambient Pressure XPS Study of Mixed Conducting Perovskite-Type SOFC Cathode and Anode Materials under Well-Defined Electrochemical Polarization

Andreas Nenning; Alexander K. Opitz; Christoph Rameshan; Raffael Rameshan; Raoul Blume; Michael Hävecker; Axel Knop-Gericke; Günther Rupprechter; Bernhard Klötzer; Jürgen Fleig

The oxygen exchange activity of mixed conducting oxide surfaces has been widely investigated, but a detailed understanding of the corresponding reaction mechanisms and the rate-limiting steps is largely still missing. Combined in situ investigation of electrochemically polarized model electrode surfaces under realistic temperature and pressure conditions by near-ambient pressure (NAP) XPS and impedance spectroscopy enables very surface-sensitive chemical analysis and may detect species that are involved in the rate-limiting step. In the present study, acceptor-doped perovskite-type La0.6Sr0.4CoO3-δ (LSC), La0.6Sr0.4FeO3-δ (LSF), and SrTi0.7Fe0.3O3-δ (STF) thin film model electrodes were investigated under well-defined electrochemical polarization as cathodes in oxidizing (O2) and as anodes in reducing (H2/H2O) atmospheres. In oxidizing atmosphere all materials exhibit additional surface species of strontium and oxygen. The polaron-type electronic conduction mechanism of LSF and STF and the metal-like mechanism of LSC are reflected by distinct differences in the valence band spectra. Switching between oxidizing and reducing atmosphere as well as electrochemical polarization cause reversible shifts in the measured binding energy. This can be correlated to a Fermi level shift due to variations in the chemical potential of oxygen. Changes of oxidation states were detected on Fe, which appears as FeIII in oxidizing atmosphere and as mixed FeII/III in H2/H2O. Cathodic polarization in reducing atmosphere leads to the reversible formation of a catalytically active Fe0 phase.


Nature Materials | 2017

Real-time impedance monitoring of oxygen reduction during surface modification of thin film cathodes

Ghislain M. Rupp; Alexander K. Opitz; Andreas Nenning; Andreas Limbeck; Jürgen Fleig

Improvement of solid oxide fuel cells strongly relies on the development of cathode materials with high catalytic activity for the oxygen reduction reaction. Excellent activity was found for perovskite-type oxides such as La1-xSrxCoO3-δ (LSC), but performance degradation, probably caused by surface composition changes, hinders exploitation of the full potential of LSC. This study reveals that the potentially very high activity of the LSC surface can be traced back to few very active sites. Already tiny amounts of SrO, for example, 4% of a monolayer, deposited on an LSC surface, lead to severe deactivation. Co, on the other hand, causes (re-)activation, suggesting that active sites are strongly related to Co being present at the surface. These insights could be gained by a novel method to measure changes of the electrochemical performance of thin film electrodes in situ, while modifying their surface: impedance spectroscopy measurements during deposition of well-defined fractions of monolayers of Sr-, Co- and La-oxides by single laser pulses in a pulsed laser deposition chamber.


Materials | 2016

The Sulphur Poisoning Behaviour of Gadolinia Doped Ceria Model Systems in Reducing Atmospheres

Matthias Gerstl; Andreas Nenning; Riza Iskandar; Veronika Rojek-Wöckner; Martin Bram; Herbert Hutter; Alexander K. Opitz

An array of analytical methods including surface area determination by gas adsorption using the Brunauer, Emmett, Teller (BET) method, combustion analysis, XRD, ToF-SIMS, TEM and impedance spectroscopy has been used to investigate the interaction of gadolinia doped ceria (GDC) with hydrogen sulphide containing reducing atmospheres. It is shown that sulphur is incorporated into the GDC bulk and might lead to phase changes. Additionally, high concentrations of silicon are found on the surface of model composite microelectrodes. Based on these data, a model is proposed to explain the multi-facetted electrochemical degradation behaviour encountered during long term electrochemical measurements. While electrochemical bulk properties of GDC stay largely unaffected, the surface polarisation resistance is dramatically changed, due to silicon segregation and reaction with adsorbed sulphur.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2016

Water-Induced Decoupling of Tracer and Electrochemical Oxygen Exchange Kinetics on Mixed Conducting Electrodes.

Andreas Nenning; Edvinas Navickas; Herbert Hutter; Jürgen Fleig

Isotope exchange depth profiling and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy are usually regarded as complementary tools for measuring the surface oxygen exchange activity of mixed conducting oxides, for example used in solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) electrodes. Only very few studies compared electrical (kq) and tracer (k*) exchange coefficients of solid–gas interfaces measured under identical conditions. The 1:1 correlation between kq and k* often made is thus more an assumption than experimentally verified. In this study it is shown that the measured rates of electrical and tracer exchange of oxygen may strongly differ. Simultaneous acquisition of kq and k* on La0.6Sr0.4FeO3-δ and SrTi0.3Fe0.7O3-δ thin film electrodes revealed that k* > 100 kq in humid oxidizing (16O2 + H218O) and humid reducing (H2 + H218O) atmospheres. These results are explained by fast water adsorption and dissociation on surface oxygen vacancies, forming two surface hydroxyl groups. Hence, interpreting experimentally determined k* values in terms of electrochemically relevant oxygen exchange is not straightforward.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Surface Chemistry of Perovskite-Type Electrodes During High Temperature CO2 Electrolysis Investigated by Operando Photoelectron Spectroscopy

Alexander K. Opitz; Andreas Nenning; Christoph Rameshan; Markus Kubicek; Thomas Götsch; Raoul Blume; Michael Hävecker; Axel Knop-Gericke; Günther Rupprechter; Bernhard Klötzer; Juergen Fleig

Any substantial move of energy sources from fossil fuels to renewable resources requires large scale storage of excess energy, for example, via power to fuel processes. In this respect electrochemical reduction of CO2 may become very important, since it offers a method of sustainable CO production, which is a crucial prerequisite for synthesis of sustainable fuels. Carbon dioxide reduction in solid oxide electrolysis cells (SOECs) is particularly promising owing to the high operating temperature, which leads to both improved thermodynamics and fast kinetics. Additionally, compared to purely chemical CO formation on oxide catalysts, SOECs have the outstanding advantage that the catalytically active oxygen vacancies are continuously formed at the counter electrode, and move to the working electrode where they reactivate the oxide surface without the need of a preceding chemical (e.g., by H2) or thermal reduction step. In the present work, the surface chemistry of (La,Sr)FeO3−δ and (La,Sr)CrO3−δ based perovskite-type electrodes was studied during electrochemical CO2 reduction by means of near-ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP-XPS) at SOEC operating temperatures. These measurements revealed the formation of a carbonate intermediate, which develops on the oxide surface only upon cathodic polarization (i.e., under sufficiently reducing conditions). The amount of this adsorbate increases with increasing oxygen vacancy concentration of the electrode material, thus suggesting vacant oxygen lattice sites as the predominant adsorption sites for carbon dioxide. The correlation of carbonate coverage and cathodic polarization indicates that an electron transfer is required to form the carbonate and thus to activate CO2 on the oxide surface. The results also suggest that acceptor doped oxides with high electron concentration and high oxygen vacancy concentration may be particularly suited for CO2 reduction. In contrast to water splitting, the CO2 electrolysis reaction was not significantly affected by metallic particles, which were exsolved from the perovskite electrodes upon cathodic polarization. Carbon formation on the electrode surface was only observed under very strong cathodic conditions, and the carbon could be easily removed by retracting the applied voltage without damaging the electrode, which is particularly promising from an application point of view.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

A novel approach for analyzing electrochemical properties of mixed conducting solid oxide fuel cell anode materials by impedance spectroscopy

Andreas Nenning; Alexander K. Opitz; Tobias M. Huber; Jürgen Fleig


Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2016

The Superior Properties of La0.6Ba0.4CoO3-δ Thin Film Electrodes for Oxygen Exchange in Comparison to La0.6Sr0.4CoO3-δ

Ghislain M. Rupp; Alexander Schmid; Andreas Nenning; Jürgen Fleig


Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2017

The electrochemical properties of Sr(Ti,Fe)O3-δ for anodes in solid oxide fuel cells

Andreas Nenning; Lukas Volgger; Elizabeth Miller; L. Mogni; Scott A. Barnett; Jürgen Fleig


Acta Chimica Slovenica | 2016

The chemical capacitance as a fingerprint of defect chemistry in mixed conducting oxides

Alexander Schmid; Ghislain M. Rupp; Christoph Slouka; Edvinas Navickas; Lukas Andrejs; Herbert Hutter; Lukas Volgger; Andreas Nenning; Juergen Fleig

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Alexander K. Opitz

Vienna University of Technology

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Jürgen Fleig

Vienna University of Technology

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Christoph Rameshan

Vienna University of Technology

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Ghislain M. Rupp

Vienna University of Technology

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Günther Rupprechter

Vienna University of Technology

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Herbert Hutter

Vienna University of Technology

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