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1.
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   

2.
Proper water management in polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) fuel cells is critical to achieve the potential of PEM fuel cells. Membrane electrolyte requires full hydration in order to function as proton conductor, often achieved by fully humidifying the anode and cathode reactant gas streams. On the other hand, water is also produced in the cell due to electrochemical reaction. The combined effect is that liquid water forms in the cell structure and water flooding deteriorates the cell performance significantly. In the present study, a design procedure has been developed for flow channels on bipolar plates that can effectively remove water from the PEM fuel cells. The main design philosophy is based on the determination of an appropriate pressure drop along the flow channel so that all the liquid water in the cell is evaporated and removed from, or carried out of, the cell by the gas stream in the flow channel. At the same time, the gas stream in the flow channel is maintained fully saturated in order to prevent membrane electrolyte dehydration. Sample flow channels have been designed, manufactured and tested for five different cell sizes of 50, 100, 200, 300 and 441 cm2. Similar cell performance has been measured for these five significantly different cell sizes, indicating that scaling of the PEM fuel cells is possible if liquid water flooding or membrane dehydration can be avoided during the cell operation. It is observed that no liquid water flows out of the cell at the anode and cathode channel exits for the present designed cells during the performance tests, and virtually no liquid water content in the cell structure has been measured by the neutron imaging technique. These measurements indicate that the present design procedure can provide flow channels that can effectively remove water in the PEM fuel cell structure.  相似文献   

3.
Liquid water transport in a polymer electrolyte fuel cell (PEFC) is a major issue for automotive applications. Mist flow with tiny droplets suspended in gas has been commonly assumed for channel flow while two-phase flow has been modeled in other cell components. However, experimental studies have found that two-phase flow in the channels has a profound effect on PEFC performance, stability and durability. Therefore, a complete two-phase flow model is developed in this work for PEFC including two-phase flow in both anode and cathode channels. The model is validated against experimental data of the wetted area ratio and pressure drop in the cathode side. Due to the intrusion of soft gas diffusion layer (GDL) material in the channels, flow resistance is higher in some channels than in others. The resulting flow maldistribution among PEFC channels is of great concern because non-uniform distributions of fuel and oxidizer result in non-uniform reaction rates and thus adversely affect PEFC performance and durability. The two-phase flow maldistribution among the parallel channels in an operating PEFC is explored in detail.  相似文献   

4.
Three-dimensional models of proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) with parallel and interdigitated flow channel designs were developed including the effects of liquid water formation on the reactant gas transport. The models were used to investigate the effects of the flow channel area ratio and the cathode flow rate on the cell performance and local transport characteristics. The results reveal that at high operating voltages, the cell performance is independent of the flow channel designs and operating parameters, while at low operating voltages, both significantly affect cell performance. For the parallel flow channel design, as the flow channel area ratio increases the cell performance improves because fuel is transported into the diffusion layer and the catalyst layer mainly by diffusion. A larger flow channel area ratio increases the contact area between the fuel and the diffusion layer, which allows more fuel to directly diffuse into the porous layers to participate in the electrochemical reaction which enhances the reaction rates. For the interdigitated flow channel design, the baffle forces more fuel to enter the cell and participate in the electrochemical reaction, so the flow channel area ratio has less effect. Forced convection not only increases the fuel transport rates but also enhances the liquid water removal, thus interdigitated flow channel design has higher performance than the parallel flow channel design. The optimal performance for the interdigitated flow channel design occurs for a flow channel area ratio of 0.4. The cell performance also improves as the cathode flow rate increases. The effects of the flow channel area ratio and the cathode flow rate on cell performance are analyzed based on the local current densities, oxygen flow rates and liquid water concentrations inside the cell.  相似文献   

5.
Neutron radiography has been used for in situ and non-destructive visualization and measurement technique for liquid water in a working proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC). In an attempt to differentiate water distribution in the anode side from that in the cathode side, a specially designed cell was machined and used for the experiment. The major difference between our design and traditional flow field design is the fact the anode channels and cathode channels were shifted by a channel width, so that the anode and cathode channels do not overlap in the majority of the active areas.

The neutron radiography experiments were performed at selected relative humidities, and stoichiometry values of cathode inlet. At each operating condition, the water distribution in anode/cathode gas diffusion layers (GDLs) was obtained. Image processing with four different spatial masks was applied to those images to differentiate liquid water in four different types of areas. Results indicate that the reactant gas relative humidity and stoichiometry significantly influence current density distribution and water distribution.  相似文献   


6.
The existing flow channels like parallel and gird channels have been modified for better fuel distribution in order to boost the performance of direct methanol fuel cell. The main objective of the work is to achieve minimized pressure drop in the flow channel, uniform distribution of methanol, reduced water accumulation, and better oxygen supply. A 3D mathematical model with serpentine channel is simulated for the cell temperature of 80 °C, 0.5 M methanol concentration. The study resulted in 40 mW/cm2 of power density and 190 mA/cm2 of current density at the operating voltage of 0.25 V. Further, the numerical study is carried out for modified flow channels to discuss their merits and demerits on anode and cathode side. The anode serpentine channel is unmatched by the modified zigzag and pin channels by ensuring the better methanol distribution under the ribs and increased the fuel consumption. But the cathode serpentine channel is lacking in water management. The modified channels at anode offered reduced pressure drop, still uniform reactant distribution is found impossible. The modified channels at cathode outperform the serpentine channel by reducing the effect of water accumulation, and uniform oxygen supply. So the serpentine channel is retained for methanol supply, and modified channel is chosen for cathode reactant supply. In comparison to cell with only serpentine channel, the serpentine anode channel combined with cathode zigzag and pin channel enhanced power density by 17.8% and 10.2% respectively. The results revealed that the zigzag and pin channel are very effective in mitigating water accumulation and ensuring better oxygen supply at the cathode.  相似文献   

7.
The overall water vapor balance and concentration distribution in the flow channels is a critical phenomenon affecting polymer electrolyte fuel cell (PEFC) performance. This paper presents, for the first time, results of a technique to measure in situ water vapor, nitrogen and oxygen distribution within the gas channels of an operating PEFC. The use of a gas chromatograph (GC) to measure high levels of water saturation directly, without dehumidification of the flow stream, is a unique aspect of this work. Following careful calibration and instrumentation, a gas chromatograph (GC) was interfaced directly to the fuel cell at various locations along the serpentine anode and cathode flow paths of a specially designed fuel cell. The 50 cm2 active area fuel cell also permits simultaneous current distribution measurements via the segmented collector plate approach. The on-line GC method allows discrete measurements of the water vapor content up to a fully saturated condition about every 2 minutes. Water vapor and other species distribution data are shown for several inlet relative humidities on the anode and cathode for different cell voltages. For the thin electrolyte membranes used (51 μm), there is little functional dependence of the anode gas channel water distribution on current output. For thin membranes, this indicates that there is little gradient in the water activity between anode and cathode, indicating diffusion can offset electro-osmotic drag under these circumstances (i<0.5 A/cm2). This technique can be used for detailed studies on water distribution and transport in the PEFC.  相似文献   

8.
Miniature temperature/humidity sensors are incorporated into the graphite flowplates of a single cell polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) in order to measure the humidity profile along the serpentine channels of both anode and cathode in real time. The sensors show robust performance and importantly are able to recover after saturation. The key observation is a significant increase in relative humidity along the anode gas channel due to back diffusion of water from cathode to anode. Such measurements may be used to determine the water balance in the cell under a range of operating conditions to facilitate model validation and system optimisation.  相似文献   

9.
The objective of this work is to optimize the dimensions of gas flow channels and walls/ribs in a proton-exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell. To achieve this goal conveniently, a relatively easy-to-approach mathematical model for PEM fuel cells has been developed. The model was used for the design optimization of fuel cells, which were fabricated and experimentally tested to compare the performance and examine these optimization effects. The model analyzes the average mass transfer and species' concentrations in flow channels, which allows the determination of an average concentration polarization, the humidity in anode and cathode gas channels, the proton conductivity of membranes, as well as the activation polarization. An electrical circuit for the current and ion conduction is applied to analyze the ohmic losses from anode current collector to cathode current collector. This model needs relatively less amount of computational time to find the VI curve of the fuel cell, and thus it can be applied to compute a large amount of cases with different flow channel dimensions and operating parameters for optimization. Experimental tests of several PEM fuel cells agreed with the modeling results satisfactorily. Both simulation and experimental results showed that relatively small widths of flow channels and ribs, together with a small ratio of the rib's width versus channel's width, are preferred for obtaining high power densities. To further demonstrate the advantage of optimized fuel cell designs, two four-cell stacks, one with optimized channel/rib designs and the other without, were compared experimentally and a much better performance of the one with the optimized design was confirmed.  相似文献   

10.
Proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell performance is directly related to the flow channel design on bipolar plates. Power gains can be found by varying the type, size, or arrangement of channels. The objective of this paper is to present two new flow channel patterns: a leaf design and a lung design. These bio-inspired designs combine the advantages of the existing serpentine and interdigitated patterns with inspiration from patterns found in nature. Both numerical simulation and experimental testing have been conducted to investigate the effects of two new flow channel patterns on fuel cell performance. From the numerical simulation, it was found that there is a lower pressure drop from the inlet to outlet in the leaf or lung design than the existing serpentine or interdigitated flow patterns. The flow diffusion to the gas diffusion layer was found be to more uniform for the new flow channel patterns. A 25 cm2 fuel cell was assembled and tested for four different flow channels: leaf, lung, serpentine and interdigitated. The polarization curve has been obtained under different operating conditions. It was found that the fuel cell with either leaf or lung design performs better than the convectional flow channel design under the same operating conditions. Both the leaf and lung design show improvements over previous designs by up to 30% in peak power density.  相似文献   

11.
In proton exchange membrane fuel cells, baffled flow channels enhance the reactant transfer from flow channels to gas diffusion layers. However, the reactant transfer depends on both the diffusive transfer and convective transfer, and how the baffles in flow channels affect them is still unknown. Therefore, in this work, a two‐dimensional, two‐phase, nonisothermal, and steady‐state model of proton exchange membrane fuel cells is developed, and these two transfer processes from flow channels to gas diffusion layers are comparatively studied. Simulation results show that first of all, the reactant transfer from flow channels to gas diffusion layers mainly depends on the diffusive transfer. Therefore, if the desire is to enhance the mass transfer from flow channels to gas diffusion layers, the diffusive mass transfer should be enhanced firstly. Being guided by this goal, a porous‐blocked baffled flow channel is developed. This flow channel design can further enhance the reactant transfer from flow channels to gas diffusion layers, and the cell performance can be improved. Moreover, when the porosities of porous blocks at the front place of flow channels are lower, the cell power is also increased but the pumping power can be reduced a lot.  相似文献   

12.
The water required for the methanol oxidation reaction in a direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC) operating with neat methanol can be supplied by diffusion from the cathode to the anode through the membrane. In this work, we present a method that allows the water transport rate through the membrane to be in-situ determined. With this method, the effects of the design parameters of the membrane electrode assembly (MEA) and operating conditions on the water transport through the membrane are investigated. The experimental data show that the water flux by diffusion from the cathode to the anode is higher than the opposite flow flux of water due to electro-osmotic drag (EOD) at a given current density, resulting in a net water transport from the cathode to the anode. The results also show that thinning the anode gas diffusion layer (GDL) and the membrane as well as thickening the cathode GDL can enhance the water transport flux from the cathode to the anode. However, a too thin anode GDL or a too thick cathode GDL will lower the cell performance due to the increases in the water concentration loss at the anode catalyst layer (CL) and the oxygen concentration loss at the cathode CL, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
Simulation of species transport and water management in PEM fuel cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A single phase computational fuel cells model is presented to elucidate three-dimensional interactions between mass transport and electrochemical kinetics in proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells with straight gas channels. The governing differential equations are solved over a single computational domain, which consists of a gas channel, gas diffusion layer, and catalyst layer for both the anode and cathode sides of the cell as well as the solid polymer membrane. Emphasis is placed on obtaining a basic understanding of how three-dimensional flow and transport phenomena in the air cathode impact the electrochemical process in the flow field. The complete cell model has been validated against experimentally measured polarization curve, showing good accuracy in reproducing cell performance over moderate current density interval. Fully three-dimensional results of the flow structure and species profiles are presented for cathode flow field. The effects of pressure on oxygen transport and water removal are illustrated through main axis of the flow structure. The model results indicate that oxygen concentration in reaction sites is significantly affected by pressure increase which leads to rising fuel cells power.  相似文献   

14.
Liquid water transport is one of the key challenges for water management in a proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell. Investigation of the air–water flow patterns inside fuel cell gas flow channels with gas diffusion layer (GDL) would provide valuable information that could be used in fuel cell design and optimization. This paper presents numerical investigations of air–water flow across an innovative GDL with catalyst layer and serpentine channel on PEM fuel cell cathode by use of a commercial Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) software package FLUENT. Different static contact angles (hydrophilic or hydrophobic) were applied to the electrode (GDL and catalyst layer). The results showed that different wettabilities of cathode electrode could affect liquid water flow patterns significantly, thus influencing on the performance of PEM fuel cells. The detailed flow patterns of liquid water were shown, several gas flow problems were observed, and some useful suggestions were given through investigating the flow patterns.  相似文献   

15.
It has been reported recently that water flooding in the cathode gas channel has significant effects on the characteristics of a proton exchange membrane fuel cell. A better understanding of this phenomenon with the aid of an accurate model is necessary for improving the water management and performance of fuel cell. However, this phenomenon is often not considered in the previous one-dimensional models where zero or a constant liquid water saturation level is assumed at the interface between gas diffusion layer and gas channel. In view of this, a one-dimensional fuel cell model that includes the effects of two-phase flow in the gas channel is proposed. The liquid water saturation along the cathode gas channel is estimated by adopting Darcy’s law to describe the convective flow of liquid water under various inlet conditions, i.e. air pressure, relative humidity and air stoichiometry. The averaged capillary pressure of gas channel calculated from the liquid water saturation is used as the boundary value at the interface to couple the cathode gas channel model to the membrane electrode assembly model. Through the coupling of the two modeling domains, the water distribution inside the membrane electrode assembly is associated with the inlet conditions. The simulation results, which are verified against experimental data and simulation results from a published computational fluid dynamics model, indicate that the effects of relative humidity and stoichiometry of inlet air are crucial to the overall fuel cell performance. The proposed model gives a more accurate treatment of the water transport in the cathode region, which enables an improved water management through an understanding of the effects of inlet conditions on the fuel cell performance.  相似文献   

16.
In this investigation, water in a single-cell proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell was managed using saturated hydrogen and dry air. The experiment was conducted at temperatures of 40, 50 and 60 °C and pressures of 1 and 1.5 bar at both the anode and cathode gas inlets. The feed velocities of hydrogen and air were fixed at 3 and 6 L min−1, respectively. After reaching steady-state conditions, the relative humidity along the single serpentine gas channel was measured. From the experimental data, water transport properties were characterized based on a membrane hydration model. The electro-osmotic drag coefficient, water diffusion coefficient, membrane ionic conductivity and water back-diffusion flux were significantly influenced by the water content in the membrane of the PEM fuel cell. The water content depended on the relative humidity profile along the gas channel. In this investigation, a negative value for the water back-diffusion flux was measured; thus, the transport of water from the cathode to the anode did not occur. This phenomenon was due to the large water concentration gradient between the anode and cathode. Therefore, this strategy successfully prevented flooding in the PEM fuel cell.  相似文献   

17.
Anode water management is critical for the efficient operation of proton exchange membrane fuel cells with a dead-ended anode. To clarify the mass transfer phenomenon in the anode flow channel under the dead-ended anode mode, and reveal the influence mechanism of pulsating flow on water management, a three-dimensional, two-phase, non-isothermal transient model is established in this study. The water content and species distribution in different layers are analyzed, and the internal relationship between water transport behavior and output performance of the proton exchange membrane fuel cell under different operating conditions is explored. The simulation results show that the output performance of the proton exchange membrane fuel cell in dead-ended anode mode is directly related to the gas diffusion layer's water saturation and the hydrogen mass transfer. Furthermore, pulsating flow can effectively suppress the back diffusion of water, and improve the mass transfer rate of hydrogen. Consequently, the water management and the operational stability of the proton exchange membrane fuel cell are significantly improved. The research results of this paper have important guiding significance for improving the water and gas management of fuel cells.  相似文献   

18.
Transient behavior is one of the key requirements for the vehicular application of proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell. The goal of this study is to develop a dynamic model of PEM fuel cell system (FCS) that is capable of characterizing the mixed effects of gas flow, pressure and humidity. In addition to the model of air supply system, the anode recirculation is also presented in this paper by an analytical model of injection pump. A steady-state, isothermal analytical fuel cell model is adopted to analyze the mass transfer in the diffusion layer and water transportation in the membrane. The liquid water accumulation in the cathode flow channel is described by a finite-rate phase-change model and the cathode flooding in the diffusion layer is also discussed. The transient phenomena in FCS are captured by the mechanical inertia of compressor and flow filling in lumped-parameter volumes of manifolds, anode and cathode.  相似文献   

19.
A three dimensional transient model fully coupling the two phase flow, species transport, heat transport, and electrochemical processes is developed to investigate the liquid water formation and transport in a polymer electrolyte fuel cell (PEFC). This model is based on the multiphase mixture (M2) formulation with a complete treatment of two phase transport throughout the PEFC, including gas channels, enabling modeling the liquid water motion in the entire PEFC. This work particularly focuses on the liquid water accumulation and transport in gas channels. It is revealed that the liquid water accumulation in gas channels mainly relies on three mechanisms and in the anode and cathode may rely on different mechanisms. The transport of liquid water in the anode channel basically follows a condensation–evaporation mechanism, in sharp contrast to the hydrodynamic transport of liquid water in the cathode channel. Liquid water in the cathode channel can finally flow outside from the exit along with the exhaust gas. As the presence of liquid water in gas channels alters the flow regime involved, from the single phase homogeneous flow to two phase flow, the flow resistance is found to significantly increase.  相似文献   

20.
In this research a 3D numerical study on a PEM fuel cell model with tubular plates is presented. The study is focused on the performance evaluation of three flow fields with cylindrical geometry (serpentine, interdigitated and straight channels) in a fuel cell. These designs are proposed not only with the aim to reduce the pressure losses that conventional designs exhibit with rectangular flow fields but also to improve the mass transport processes that take place in the fuel cell cathode. A commercial computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code was used to solve the numerical model. From the numerical solution of the fluid mechanics equations and the electrochemical model of Butler-Volmer different analysis of pressure losses, species concentration, current density, temperature and ionic conductivity were carried out. The results were obtained at the flow channels and the catalyst layers as well as in the gas diffusion layers and the membrane interfaces. Numerical results showed that cylindrical channel configurations reduced the pressure losses in the cell due to the gradual reduction of the angle at the flow path and the twist of the channel, thus facilitating the expulsion of liquid water from the gas diffusion layers and in turn promoting a high oxygen concentration at the triple phase boundary of the catalyst layers. Moreover, numerical results were compared to polarization curves and the literature data reported for similar designs. These results demonstrated that conventional flow field designs applied to conventional tubular plates have some advantages over the rectangular designs, such as uniform pressure and current density distributions among others, therefore they could be considered for fuel cell designs in portable applications.  相似文献   

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