FuelCells (Yang)
FuelCells (Yang)
FuelCells (Yang)
Topics
Electrochemistry Thermodynamics Kinetics Single Cells Stacks Fuel Cell Systems Applications
Uncertainties
! Economics ! Fuel Source Emissions Efficiency
_
Anode
electrons (e-)
+
Cathode
H2
Anodic Reaction H2 " 2 H+ + 2 e6
O2
Electrolyte Electrodes and Catalyst
Alkaline Fuel Cell (AFC) Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell (PEMFC) Direct Methanol Fuel Cell (DMFC) Phosphoric Acid Fuel Cells Molten Carbonate Fuel Cells Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
H2 + 2(OH)- " 2 H2O + 2eH2 " 2H+ +2eCH3OH + H2O " CO2 + 6H+ + 6eH2 " 2H+ +2eH2 + CO32- " H2O + CO2 + 2eH2 + O2- " H2O + 2e-
1/2 O2 + H2O + 2e- " 2(OH)1/2 O2 + 2H+ +2e- " H2O 1/2 O2 + 2H+ + 2e- " H2O 1/2 O2 + 2H+ +2e- " H2O 1/2 O2 + CO2 + 2e- " CO321/2 O2 + 2e- " O2-
Enthalpy
1 0.9
0.8
thermal efficiency
1600
0.3 0.25
power [W/cm2]
0.6 0.2 0.4 0.15 0.1 0.2 0.05 0 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 current density [mA/cm2] 0
H2 + 1/2 O2 " H2O + work + heat #G is the maximum useful work associated with a chemical reaction "G = #nFErev #H is the maximum heat associated with a chemical reaction "H = #nFE therm
!
10
11
12
H2 + 1/2O2 ! H2O 1 bar reactant pressure (standard conditions) product H2O ! Hrxn ! Grxn " theoretical Etn (V) Erev (V) phase (kJ/mol) (kJ/mol) LHV (vapor) -241.8 -228.6 94.5% 1.253 1.185 HHV (liquid) -286 - 237.3 83% 1.482 1.229 LHV -242.3 -226.2 93.3% 1.256 1.172 HHV -283.8 -233.7 82.3% 1.471 1.212 LHV -242.8 -223.9 92.2% 1.258 1.160 HHV -282.1 -230.4 81.7% 1.462 1.195 LHV -243.8 -219.1 89.8% 1.259 1.131 LHV -247.2 -198.1 80.1% 1.277 1.023 LHV -249.4 -175.8 70.5% 1.288 0.908
Q=
[C ]c [ D] d
[ A]a [ B]b
"theoretical =
"real =
!
13
Faradaic efficiency
"f = i if
!
!
PPL Ptotal
!
14
Electrode reactions
Anode reactions
! Oxidation - electron loss from reactant ! Electron enters electrode ! H2 $ H+ + eAnode (-) e-
Galvanic Cell
Ammeter e-
NO3-
Na+
Salt bridge
NO3-
Na+
Cathode reactions
! Reduction - electron gain for reactants ! Electron leaves electrode ! O2 + 4H+ + 4e-
Copper
NO3
Porous Plugs
NO3 Ag + Ag NO3+
Ag
+
Ag
+
$ 2H2O
Potential Energy
VF
16
Electrode kinetics
Butler-Volmer equation
! Describes the current as a function of electrode potential (voltage) ! O + e- $ R (switch sign for reverse reaction)
! i - current, F - Faradays constant, kf and kr - rate constants for forward and reverse reactions, co and cr - concentration of oxidized and reduced species, % - the symmetry factor for electrode reaction and V - electrode voltage
" = (V # VR )
! The overpotential & is the difference between the actual voltage and the reversible voltage.
17
&
&
18
Mixed potential
Platinum can be oxidized which can be a problem because it
competes with hydrogen oxidation.
! Pt + H2O $ PtOH + H+ + e! Pt + H2O $ PtO + 2H+ + 2e!
1/ O 2 2
+ H+ + e- " H2O
! Hydrogen and methanol crossover is another reason for a mixed or corrosion potential
19
Oxidation kinetics
The current potential (iV) curves will depend strongly only the kinetics
of the fuel being oxidized
1
0.8
cell voltage [V]
0.6
0 0
20
250
500
750
1000
2
1250
1500
Ion conduction
Electric Field
! ' = #V/d
Force on Ion
! Felectric = z e ' = [z e #V]/d
21
Solid Electrolyte
! defect conduction ! Solid Oxide Fuel Cell
ideal fuel cell
Ohms Law
! #V = IR
22
double layers
Reactants are supplied to the electrodes via diffusion At very high current densities (reaction rate) the rate of diffusion may
be slower than the rate of reactant utilization
Q=
[C ]c [ D] d
[ A]a [ B]b
!
23
Polymer electrolyte
24
Bipolar Plates
Act as gas separators - gas impermeable Flow fields for gases - flow pattern is important Current collectors - high conductivity Polymer graphite or metallic End plates have high current flow
Anode Inlet
Cathode Inlet
Anode Exhaust
_ 1
4 +
Cathode Exhaust
25
H2 26
O2
Components
! High surface area Platinum catalyst w/ polymer
27
F C F F C F
F C F F C F
O S O OH+
SO3- SO3SO3-
SO3SO3CF2 - CF2
28
SO3SO3-
SO3SO3- SO3
-
SO3CF2 - CF2
Polymer membranes
Water is key
! Membrane reorganization ! Conductivity
Nafion 115
1
0.1
" [S/cm]
0.01
Nafion 115
0.001 0
29
6 ! [H2O/SO3H]
10
12
CO poisoning
CO poisoning of anode electrocatalyst
! CO + Pt ! Pt-CO ! H2 + 2Pt ! 2 Pt-H
1.00 0.80 0.60 0.40 1 ppm CO 0.20 0.00 50 100 150 Temperature [ C]
o
100 ppm CO
10 ppm CO
200
250
30
Electrode reactions
Fuel introduced as liquid feed 1 M methanol (1 mole methanol/liter) on anode side Platinum ruthenium catalyst Advantages
! ! Easier transportation/storage of methanol water and thermal management issues easier Low electro-activity for methanol Reduced efficiency and power Develop electrocatalysts for electro-oxidation of methanol to improve kinetics and current density Minimize crossover of methanol, which is very soluble in polymer membrane Reduce poisoning of catalysts by reaction intermediates
Disadvantages
! !
Issues/Challenges
!
31
! !
Electrode Reactions
! ! Anode Reaction: H2 + O2- " H2O + 2eCathode Reaction: O2 + 2e- " 2O2-
32
33
Fuel utilization
Optimization
! Efficiency, operating cost, reliability, fuel cell life, operating flexibility
70
80
90
H2 Utilization factor
Tradeoffs:
! efficiency vs power density
Higher Efficiency
Operating Parameters:
! Load ! Temperature ! Pressurization ! Gas concentration ! Reactant utilization
Lower Efficiency voltage V