Fuel Cell Design
In essence, a fuel cell works by catalysis, separating the component electrons and protons of the reactant fuel, and forcing the electrons to travel though a circuit,
hence converting them to electrical power. The catalyst is typically
comprised of a platinum group metal or alloy. Another catalytic process
takes the electrons back in, combining them with the protons and the
oxidant to form waste products (typically simple compounds like water
and carbon dioxide).
In the archetypal hydrogen–oxygen proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) design, a proton-conducting polymer membrane, (the electrolyte), separates the anode and cathode
sides. This was called a "solid polymer electrolyte fuel cell" (SPEFC)
in the early 1970s, before the proton exchange mechanism was
well-understood. (Notice that "polymer electrolyte membrane" and
"proton exchange membrane" result in the same acronym.)
On the anode side, hydrogen diffuses to the anode catalyst where it
later dissociates into protons and electrons. These protons often react
with oxidants causing them to become what is commonly referred to as
multi-facilitated proton membranes (MFPM). The protons are conducted
through the membrane to the cathode, but the electrons are forced to
travel in an external circuit (supplying power) because the membrane is
electrically insulating. On the cathode catalyst, oxygen molecules
react with the electrons (which have traveled through the external
circuit) and protons to form water — in this example, the only waste
product, either liquid or vapor.
In addition to this pure hydrogen type, there are hydrocarbon fuels for fuel cells, including diesel, methanol (see: direct-methanol fuel cells) and chemical hydrides. The waste products with these types of fuel are carbon dioxide and water.
Construction of a low temperature PEMFC: Bipolar plate as electrode with in-milled gas channel structure, fabricated from conductive plastics (enhanced with carbon nanotubes for more conductivity); Porous carbon papers; reactive layer, usually on the polymer membrane applied; polymer membrane.
Condensation of water produced by a PEMFC on the air channel wall. The
gold wire around the cell ensures the collection of electric current. [2]
The materials used in fuel cells differ by type. The electrode–bipolar plates are usually made of metal, nickel or carbon nanotubes, and are coated with a catalyst (like platinum, nano iron powders or palladium) for higher efficiency. Carbon paper separates them from the electrolyte. The electrolyte could be ceramic or a membrane.
A typical PEM fuel cell produces a voltage from 0.6 V to 0.7 V at
full rated load. Voltage decreases as current increases, due to several
factors:
- Activation loss
- Ohmic loss (voltage drop due to resistance of the cell components and interconnects)
- Mass transport loss (depletion of reactants at catalyst sites under high loads, causing rapid loss of voltage)[3]
To deliver the desired amount of energy, the fuel cells can be combined in series and parallel circuits, where series yield higher voltage, and parallel allows a stronger current to be drawn. Such a design is called a fuel cell stack. Further, the cell surface area can be increased, to allow stronger current from each cell.
Fuel cell design issues
- Costs. In 2002, typical cells had a catalyst content of US$1000 per
kilowatt of electric power output. In 2008 UTC Power has 400kw Fuel
cells for $1,000,000 per 400kW installed costs. The goal is to reduce
the cost in order to compete with current market technologies including
gasoline internal combustion engines. Many companies are working on
techniques to reduce cost in a variety of ways including reducing the
amount of platinum needed in each individual cell. Ballard Power Systems have experiments with a catalyst enhanced with carbon silk which allows a 30% reduction (1 mg/cm² to 0.7 mg/cm²) in platinum usage without reduction in performance.[4]
- The production costs of the PEM (proton exchange membrane). The Nafion membrane currently costs €400/m². This, and the Toyota PEM and 3M PEM membrane can be replaced with the ITM Power
membrane (a hydrocarbon polymer), resulting in a price of ~€4/m². in
2005 Ballard Power Systems announced that its fuel cells will use
Solupor, a porous polyethylene film patented by DSM.[5][6]
- Water and air management[7]
(in PEMFCs). In this type of fuel cell, the membrane must be hydrated,
requiring water to be evaporated at precisely the same rate that it is
produced. If water is evaporated too quickly, the membrane dries,
resistance across it increases, and eventually it will crack, creating
a gas "short circuit" where hydrogen and oxygen combine directly,
generating heat that will damage the fuel cell. If the water is
evaporated too slowly, the electrodes will flood, preventing the
reactants from reaching the catalyst and stopping the reaction. Methods
to manage water in cells are being developed like electroosmotic pumps
focusing on flow control. Just as in a combustion engine, a steady
ratio between the reactant and oxygen is necessary to keep the fuel
cell operating efficiently.
- Temperature management. The same temperature must be maintained
throughout the cell in order to prevent destruction of the cell through
thermal loading. This is particularly challenging as the 2H2 + O2 -> 2H2O reaction is highly exothermic, so a large quantity of heat is generated within the fuel cell.
- Durability, service life,
and special requirements for some type of cells. Stationary
applications typically require more than 40,000 hours of reliable
operation at a temperature of -35 °C to 40 °C, while automotive fuel
cells require a 5,000 hour lifespan (the equivalent of 150,000 miles)
under extreme temperatures. Automotive engines must also be able to
start reliably at -30 °C and have a high power to volume ratio
(typically 2.5 kW per liter).
- Limited carbon monoxide tolerance of the anode.
References
- ^ S. G. Meibuhr, Electrochim. Acta, 11, 1301 (1966)
- ^ LEMTA - Our fuel cells
- ^ Larminie, James (May 2003). Fuel Cell Systems Explained, Second Edition. SAE International. ISBN 0768012597.
- ^ "Ballard Power Systems: Commercially Viable Fuel Cell Stack Technology Ready by 2010", March 29, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ EP patent 0950075, "Electrolytic Membrane, Method of Manufacturing it and Use", granted 2003-02-12, assigned to DSM
- ^ Ballard Uses Solupor (September 13, 2005). Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ Water_and_Air_Management
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Fuel Cell"
|