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1.
The importance of gravity effect on the performance of proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) has recently been recognized. In this paper, the effect of gravity on the performance of PEMFC has been investigated associating with different gas intake modes. The polarization curves of the stack with different positions of reaction gas inlet and outlet at varied gravitational angles are addressed in detail. The results indicate that the output power of PEMFC stack can be greatly enhanced at the optimized gravitational angle. Gas intake modes that were realized by varying the gas inlet and outlet positions strongly affect the stack performance as well. The optimized performance can be reached at the tilted angle of 90° when both air and hydrogen inlets are placed at the upper side of the stack, whereas the worst performance occurs at the tilted angle of 90° when air and hydrogen flow into the channel from the bottom side of the stack. These results have important implications for PEM fuel cell design and operational strategies. In order to improve the performance, fuel cells should be designed and operated at the optimized gravitational angle and gas inlet/outlet position. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

2.
Low ambient pressures at elevated flight altitudes lead to power losses in fuel cell powered aircrafts. As countermeasure ambient air can be pressurized with a suitable fuel cell air supply system. In this study the influence of low ambient pressures and pressure losses within the system on the performance of two turbo compressors and the resulting stack power are examined theoretically and the findings validated experimentally. Results show that decreasing ambient pressures and pressure losses in front and after the compressor reduce the maximum pressure from 2.4 to 1.6 bar(a) in the examined system. Air compression may require a significant share of the fuel cell stack power and the maximum system power is reduced from 54 to 41 kW. For air pressures higher than 1.8 bar(a) the fuel cell stack power gain due to pressurization is found to be cancelled out by the increasing power required for air compression.  相似文献   

3.
This paper presents a novel fuel cell stack architecture that allows each fuel cell to work at the same condition, maintaining the same performance from each individual cell and creating a maximum power output from the cell stack. A fuel cell stack having four PEM fuel cells was fabricated to experimentally compare its performance when fuel and air supplying/distribution schemes are different. The performance of the fuel cell stack and individual cells in the stack is measured to achieve a detailed evaluation of the effect of the different fuel and air supplying schemes. Experimental data shows that non-uniform flow distribution to individual cells has a considerable influence on individual cell performance, which affects the power output of the fuel cell stack. The fuel cell stack with the novel approach of fuel and air feeding shows a better power output performance compared to a different fuel and air feeding approach to the fuel cell stack.  相似文献   

4.
In order to eliminate the local CO2 emissions from vehicles and to combat the associated climate change, the classic internal combustion engine can be replaced by an electric motor. The two most advantageous variants for the necessary electrical energy storage in the vehicle are currently the purely electrochemical storage in batteries and the chemical storage in hydrogen with subsequent conversion into electrical energy by means of a fuel cell stack. The two variants can also be combined in a battery electric vehicle with a fuel cell range extender, so that the vehicle can be refuelled either purely electrically or using hydrogen. The air compressor, a key component of a PEM fuel cell system, can be operated at different air excess and pressure ratios, which influence the stack as well as the system efficiency. To asses the steady state behaviour of a PEM fuel cell range extender system, a system test bench utilising a commercially available 30 kW stack (96 cells, 409 cm2 cell area) was developed. The influences of the operating parameters (air excess ratio 1.3 to 1.7, stack temperature 20 °C–60 °C, air compressor pressure ratio up to 1.67, load point 122 mA/cm2 to 978 mA/cm2) on the fuel cell stack voltage level (constant ambient relative humidity of 45%) and the corresponding system efficiency were measured by utilising current, voltage, mass flow, temperature and pressure sensors. A fuel cell stack model was presented, which correlates closely with the experimental data (0.861% relative error). The air supply components were modelled utilising a surface fit. Subsequently, the system efficiency of the validated model was optimised by varying the air mass flow and air pressure. It is shown that higher air pressures and lower air excess ratios increase the system efficiency at high loads. The maximum achieved system efficiency is 55.21% at the lowest continuous load point and 43.74% at the highest continuous load point. Future work can utilise the test bench or the validated model for component design studies to further improve the system efficiency.  相似文献   

5.
Polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) fuel cells convert the chemical energy of hydrogen and oxygen directly into electrical energy. Waste heat and water are the reaction by‐products, making PEM fuel cells a promising zero‐emission power source for transportation and stationary co‐generation applications. In this study, a mathematical model of a PEM fuel cell stack is formulated. The distributions of the pressure and mass flow rate for the fuel and oxidant streams in the stack are determined with a hydraulic network analysis. Using these distributions as operating conditions, the performance of each cell in the stack is determined with a mathematical, single cell model that has been developed previously. The stack model has been applied to PEM fuel cell stacks with two common stack configurations: the U and Z stack design. The former is designed such that the reactant streams enter and exit the stack on the same end, while the latter has reactant streams entering and exiting on opposite ends. The stack analysed consists of 50 individual active cells with fully humidified H2 or reformate as fuel and humidified O2 or air as the oxidant. It is found that the average voltage of the cells in the stack is lower than the voltage of the cell operating individually, and this difference in the cell performance is significantly larger for reformate/air reactants when compared to the H2/O2 reactants. It is observed that the performance degradation for cells operating within a stack results from the unequal distribution of reactant mass flow among the cells in the stack. It is shown that strategies for performance improvement rely on obtaining a uniform reactant distribution within the stack, and include increasing stack manifold size, decreasing the number of gas flow channels per bipolar plate, and judicially varying the resistance to mass flow in the gas flow channels from cell to cell. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

6.
An experimental study is carried out to investigate effects of stack orientation and vibration on the performance of Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) fuel cell. A 25‐cm2 single cell with serpentine anode and straight cathode flow channels is used. The hydrogen flow rate, cathode air temperature, and relative humidity are kept constant at 60 smL/min, 20 °C and 80%, respectively, whereas the cathode air flow rate values are 220, 440, and 660 smL/min as well as free breathing case. An orientation and vibration mechanisms are designed to facilitate different values orientation positions and vibration amplitude and frequency of the stack. The results show that stack orientation and vibration have significant effects on the performance of PEM fuel cell. Based on the results obtained from this study, it can be concluded that optimum positions of cell orientation are 30° and 90° at low and high values of cathode air flow rate, respectively. Also, an improvement in the performance of the fuel cell is achieved when the stack is vibrated with low values of amplitude and frequency. Each of cell maximum power density and maximum hydrogen utilization decreases with increasing each of amplitude and frequency of stack vibration. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

7.
Nonlinearity and the time-varying dynamics of fuel cell systems make it complex to design a controller for improving output performance. This paper introduces an application of a model reference adaptive control to a low-power proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell system, which consists of three main components: a fuel cell stack, an air pump to supply air, and a solenoid valve to adjust hydrogen flow. From the system perspective, the dynamic model of the PEM fuel cell stack can be expressed as a multivariable configuration of two inputs, hydrogen and air-flow rates, and two outputs, cell voltage and current. The corresponding transfer functions can be identified off-line to describe the linearized dynamics with a finite order at a certain operating point, and are written in a discrete-time auto-regressive moving-average model for on-line estimation of parameters. This provides a strategy of regulating the voltage and current of the fuel cell by adaptively adjusting the flow rates of air and hydrogen. Experiments show that the proposed adaptive controller is robust to the variation of fuel cell system dynamics and power request. Additionally, it helps decrease fuel consumption and relieves the DC/DC converter in regulating the fluctuating cell voltage.  相似文献   

8.
PEM fuel cells when operated on hydrogen from renewable sources are viewed as one of the most environmentally friendly energy conversion systems due to their high electrical efficiency. However, this advantage is depending on the overall system design, which is largely determined by the allowable operating conditions of the fuel cell stack itself. Besides the active materials, design and shape of the gas distribution zone have a significant influence on stack operation. In order to optimize overall system performance, a fuel cell stack with improved flow field design and performance was developed. An investigation on channel geometries led to a serpentine flow field with a moderate degree of parallelization and ribs with variable width to reduce cross transport effects. The resulting flow field subsequently has been modified slightly to allow a high volume production process. Summarizing, power as well as the degrees of H2 and air utilization could be enhanced leading to a power density enhancement. Furthermore, weight reduction of end plates nearly by half using an improved end plate design led to an overall improved stack design.  相似文献   

9.
In the present study a two‐dimensional model of a tubular solid oxide fuel cell operating in a stack is presented. The model analyzes electrochemistry, momentum, heat and mass transfers inside the cell. Internal steam reforming of the reformed natural gas is considered for hydrogen production and Gibbs energy minimization method is used to calculate the fuel equilibrium species concentrations. The conservation equations for energy, mass, momentum and voltage are solved simultaneously using appropriate numerical techniques. The heat radiation between the preheater and cathode surface is incorporated into the model and local heat transfer coefficients are determined throughout the anode and cathode channels. The developed model has been compared with the experimental and numerical data available in literature. The model is used to study the effect of various operating parameters such as excess air, operating pressure and air inlet temperature and the results are discussed in detail. The results show that a more uniform temperature distribution can be achieved along the cell at higher air‐flow rates and operating pressures and the cell output voltage is enhanced. It is expected that the proposed model can be used as a design tool for SOFC stack in practical applications. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

10.
A proper system must be applied in order to have reliable power production and higher levels of durability. The functions of this system are to fully utilize the benefits of the fuel cell components and to deliver the required power. This paper presents the design for an HT-PEMFC single-cell test cell with the development of a test station to operate the cell. The single-cell test cell and the real-time monitoring test station were designed using LabVIEW software, and were implemented using NI's cFP hardware devices, the details of which are provided. The architecture of the test station was aimed at measuring and controlling the mass flow rate, pressure and temperature of the reactant gases, and the stack temperature and current. An electronic load, with a quick dynamic response, was used to test the fuel cell reaction. The start-up, shutdown and monitoring functions were managed by the test station, which monitored the critical parameters of the fuel cell, namely, the voltage, current loading, generated power, hydrogen/air inlet and outlet and stack temperature. The results showed that the designed and developed single-cell HT-PEMFC and test station were able to generate power. An in-depth research needs to be conducted into the innovative design and development of HT-PEMFC systems since these are the key factors for optimum performance.  相似文献   

11.
Single fuel cells running independently are often used for fundamental studies of water transport. It is also necessary to assess the dynamic behavior of fuel cell stacks comprised of multiple cells arranged in series, thus providing many paths for flow of reactant hydrogen on the anode and air (or pure oxygen) on the cathode. In the current work, the flow behavior of a fuel cell stack is simulated by using a single-cell test fixture coupled with a bypass flow loop for the cathode flow. This bypass simulates the presence of additional cells in a stack and provides an alternate path for airflow, thus avoiding forced convective purging of cathode flow channels. Liquid water accumulation in the cathode is shown to occur in two modes; initially nearly all the product water is retained in the gas diffusion layer until a critical saturation fraction is reached and then water accumulation in the flow channels begins. Flow redistribution and fuel cell performance loss result from channel slug formation. The application of in-situ neutron radiography affords a transient correlation of performance loss to liquid water accumulation. The current results identify a mechanism whereby depleted cathode flow on a single cell leads to performance loss, which can ultimately cause an operating proton exchange membrane fuel cell stack to fail.  相似文献   

12.
A 3-cell stack of anode supported planar solid oxide fuel cell was built to evaluate the application of an external-manifold design in this research. This short stack was operated with hydrogen as fuel and air as oxidant at 750 °C. The stack had an OCV of 3.36 V, produced about 100 W in total power with a power density of 0.56 W/cm2. The stack also underwent 51 h degradation test at the current density of 0.55 A/cm2. The test results have demonstrated that this external-manifold stack had an excellent and steady performance during the test. Computer simulation was employed to help optimizing the parameters of the design and explaining the different performances between the cells. The simulation results suggested that the external-manifold design could generate a uniform gas distribution for a short stack, and the different performances of the individual cells were mainly caused by the uneven temperatures distribution between the cells.  相似文献   

13.
The paper presents a configuration of mini CHP with the methane reformer and planar solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) stacks. This mini CHP may produce electricity and superheated steam as well as preheat air and methane for the reformer along with cathode air used in the SOFC stack as an oxidant. Moreover, the mathematical model for this power plant has been created. The thermochemical reactor with impeded fluidized bed for autothermal steam reforming of methane (reformer) considered as the basis for the synthesis gas (syngas) production to fuel SOFC stacks has been studied experimentally as well. A fraction of conversion products has been oxidized by the air fed to the upper region of the impeded fluidized bed in order to carry out the endothermic methane steam reforming in a 1:3 ratio as well as to preheat products of these reactions. Studies have shown that syngas containing 55% of hydrogen could be produced by this reactor. Basic dimensions of the reactor as well as flow rates of air, water and methane for the conversion of methane have been adjusted through mathematical modelling.The paper provides heat balances for the reformer, SOFC stack and waste heat boiler (WHB) intended for generating superheated water steam along with preheating air and methane for the reformer as well as the preheated cathode air. The balances have formed the basis for calculating the following values: the useful product fraction in the reformer; fraction of hydrogen oxidized at SOFC anode; gross electric efficiency; anode temperature; exothermic effect of syngas hydrogen oxidation by air oxygen; excess entropy along with the Gibbs free energy change at standard conditions; electromotive force (EMF) of the fuel cell; specific flow rate of the equivalent fuel for producing electric and heat energy. Calculations have shown that the temperature of hydrogen oxidation products at SOFC anode is 850 °C; gross electric efficiency is 61.0%; EMF of one fuel cell is 0.985 V; fraction of hydrogen oxidized at SOFC anode is 64.6%; specific flow rate of the equivalent fuel for producing electric energy is 0.16 kg of eq.f./(kW·h) while that for heat generation amounts to 44.7 kg of eq.f./(GJ). All specific parameters are in agreement with the results of other studies.  相似文献   

14.
Design-point and part-load characteristics of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) system, fuelled by methane and hydrogen, are investigated for its prospective use in the residential application. As a part of this activity, a detailed SOFC cell model is developed, evaluated and extended to a stack model. Models of all the required balance of plant components are also developed and are integrated to build a system model. Using this model, two system base cases for methane and hydrogen fuels are introduced. Cogeneration relevant performance figures are investigated for different system configurations and cell parameters i.e. fuel utilization, fuel flow rate, operation voltage and extent of internal fuel reforming. The results show high combined heat and power efficiencies for both cases, with higher thermal-to-electric ratio and lower electric efficiency for the hydrogen-fuelled cases. Performance improvements with radiation air pre-heaters and anode gas recycling are presented and the respective application limits discussed.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Proton exchange membrane fuel cell is a well-known technology that has shown high efficiency and performance as a power system compared to conventional sources such as internal combustion engines. Especially, open cathode proton exchange membrane is growing more popular thanks to its simple structure, low cost and low parasitic losses. However, the open cathode fuel cell performance is highly related to the operating temperature variation and the airflow rate which is adjusted through the fan voltage. In this regard, the present study investigates the thermal management of an open cathode proton exchange membrane fuel cell. The objectives are the stack performance improvement and the stack degradation prevention. Indeed, a safety and optimal operating zone governed by the load current, the stack temperature and the air stoichiometry, is designed. This optimal operating zone is defined based on the system thermal balance and the operating constraints. Hence, the proposed control strategy deals concurrently with the stack temperature regulation and the air stoichiometry adjustment to guarantee the goals achievement. The performance of the proposed control strategy is verified through experimental studies with different operating conditions and results prove its efficiency. To properly design an appropriate control strategy, a multiphysic fuel cell model is developed based on acausal approach by mean of Matlab/Simscape and experimentally validated.  相似文献   

17.
This work presents a control strategy for controlling the methanol reformer temperature of a 350 W high temperature polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell system, by using a cascade control structure for reliable system operation. The primary states affecting the methanol catalyst bed temperature is the water and methanol mixture fuel flow and the burner fuel/air ratio and combined flow. An experimental setup is presented capable of testing the methanol reformer used in the Serenergy H3 350 Mobile Battery Charger; a high temperature polymer electrolyte membrane (HTPEM) fuel cell system. The experimental system consists of a fuel evaporator utilizing the high temperature waste gas from the cathode air cooled 45 cell HTPEM fuel cell stack. The fuel cells used are BASF P1000 MEAs which use phosphoric acid doped polybenzimidazole membranes. The resulting reformate gas output of the reformer system is shown at different reformer temperatures and fuel flows, using the implemented reformer control strategy. The gas quality of the output reformate gas is of HTPEM grade quality, and sufficient for supporting efficient and reliable HTPEM fuel cell operation with CO concentrations of around 1% at the nominal reformer operating temperatures. As expected increasing temperatures also increase the dry gas CO content of the reformate gas and decreases the methanol slip. The hydrogen content of the gas was measured at around 73% with 25% CO2.  相似文献   

18.
An open-air cathode proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) was developed. This paper presents a study of the effect of several critical operating conditions on the performance of an 8-cell stack. The studied operating conditions such as cell temperature, air flow rate and hydrogen pressure and flow rate were varied in order to identify situations that could arise when the PEMFC stack is used in low-power portable PEMFC applications. The stack uses an air fan in the edge of the cathode manifolds, combining high stoichiometric oxidant supply and stack cooling purposes. In comparison with natural convection air-breathing stacks, the air dual-function approach brings higher stack performances, at the expense of having a lower use of the total stack power output. Although improving the electrochemical reactions kinetics and decreasing the polarization effects, the increase of the stack temperature lead to membrane excessive dehydration (loss of sorbed water), increasing the ohmic resistance of the stack (lower performance).  相似文献   

19.
A new algorithm is presented to integrate component balances along polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) channels to obtain three-dimensional results from a detailed two-dimensional finite element model. The analysis studies the cell performance at various hydrogen flow rates, air flow rates and humidification levels. This analysis shows that hydrogen and air flow rates and their relative humidity are critical to current density, membrane dry-out, and electrode flooding. Uniform current densities along the channels are known to be critical for thermal management and fuel cell life. This approach, of integrating a detailed two-dimensional across-the-channel model, is a promising method for fuel cell design due to its low computational cost compared to three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics models, its applicability to a wide range of fuel cell designs, and its ease of extending to fuel cell stack models.  相似文献   

20.
Solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC) can utilize various fuels, such as natural gas, hydrogen and biogas, but often, it is sensible to use a pre‐reformer that converts the fuel into a hydrogen‐rich gas stream. Relevant testing conditions, including the fuel to be used in SOFC systems, are important because cell performance depends on test conditions, such as fuel composition. Still, a majority of the reported single‐cell and short stack tests are performed with pure hydrogen or synthetic reformate mixed from gas bottles. In this article, the development of a fuel feeder used to pre‐reform natural gas for a single cell SOFC test station is presented. To mimic SOFC system conditions, natural gas is taken from the grid, desulfurized with commercial sulfur sorbent and reformed with a commercial precious metal catalyst. The fuel feeder is designed to be a versatile and efficient research tool, capable to be used in a wide temperature and gas flow range and with different reforming techniques, such as steam reforming, catalytic partial oxidation and simulated anode off‐gas recycling. The construction, operation and characterization of the fuel feeder as well as methods of avoiding carbon formation are discussed. The performance is evaluated by comparing measured outlet temperatures and compositions against equilibrium values. All measured gas compositions matched closely with the calculated equilibrium values, and the identified deviations were small and to no harm in practical use. The operator can control the product gas composition by setting the fuel feeder heater to the temperature corresponding to the targeted composition. Results show that the fuel feeder design can be used as such for single‐cell testing or scaled to fit larger stack test stations. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

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