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Fuel Cells: Efficiency and Materials

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Vince Biccoca. Topics. What is a Fuel Cell? Types of Fuel Cells. Proton Exchange Membrane ... John McMahon. Silver anodes require a rough pitted surface ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fuel Cells: Efficiency and Materials


1
Fuel CellsEfficiency and Materials
  • By Tony Phan
  • Ari Erman
  • Michael Hair
  • Mike Countis
  • Vince Biccoca

2
Topics
  • What is a Fuel Cell?
  • Types of Fuel Cells
  • Proton Exchange Membrane
  • Direct Methanol
  • Zinc Air
  • Regenerative
  • Alkaline
  • Biological
  • Sugar
  • The Problem of Platinum
  • Conclusion

3
FUEL CELL
  • DEFINITION. An electrochemical device that
    continuously changes the chemical energy of a
    fuel (hydrogen) and oxidant (oxygen) directly to
    electrical energy and heat, without combustion.
  • PRINCIPLE. The electrical process causes hydrogen
    atoms to give up their electrons. It is similar
    to a battery in that it has electrodes, an
    electrolyte, and positive and negative terminals.
  • USAGE. A fuel cell provides a DC (direct current)
    voltage that can be used to power motors, lights
    or any number of electrical appliances. There are
    several different types of fuel cells, each using
    a different chemistry. Fuel cells are usually
    classified by the type of electrolyte they use.
  • ADVANTAGES. No combustion therefore few
    emissions. No moving parts therefore quiet.

4
Proton Exchange Membrane
  • Proton exchange membrane fuel cell uses one of
    the simplest reactions of any fuel cell.
  • Anode side 2H2 gt 4H 4e-
  • Cathode side O2 4H 4e- gt 2H2O
  • Net reaction 2H2 O2 gt 2H2O

5
Proton Membrane
  • The anode conducts the electrons that are freed
    from the hydrogen molecules. It disperse the
    hydrogen gas equally over the surface of the
    catalyst.
  • The cathode, the positive post of the fuel cell,
    distributes the oxygen to the surface of the
    catalyst. It also conducts the electrons back
    from the external circuit to the catalyst, where
    they can recombine with the hydrogen ions and
    oxygen to form water.
  • The electrolyte is the proton exchange membrane.
    This specially treated material, which looks
    something like ordinary kitchen plastic wrap,
    only conducts positively charged ions. The
    membrane blocks electrons.
  • The catalyst is a special material that
    facilitates the reaction of oxygen and hydrogen.
    It is usually made of platinum powder very thinly
    coated onto carbon paper or cloth. The catalyst
    is rough and porous so that the maximum surface
    area of the platinum can be exposed to the
    hydrogen or oxygen. The platinum-coated side of
    the catalyst faces the PEM.

6
Advantages of PEMFC
  • PEMFCs operate at a fairly low temperature (about
    176 degrees Fahrenheit, 80 degrees Celsius),
    which means they warm up quickly and don't
    require expensive containment structures.
    Constant improvements in the engineering and
    materials used in these cells have increased the
    power density to a level where a device about the
    size of a small piece of luggage can power a car.

7
Direct Methanol Fuel Cells
8
The scenario
  • Coal is used as a fuel and primarily for
    electrical power. It is also far more abundant,
    energy wise, in the United States than either
    petroleum or natural gas. Even though coal is not
    widely used as a transportation fuel feedstock,
    commercial processes have been developed to
    produce both methanol and hydrogen from coal.
    This is clearly a scenario of interest since
    these processes also carry the possibility of
    transportation energy independence.
  • Natural gas and coal are the only energy sources
    currently available in quantities comparable to
    petroleum for transportation. However these
    resources have limited quantities

9
The solution
  • Using the hydrogen and methanol from burning coal
    and combining it with water we can turn it into a
    new form of energy.
  • Methanol is the most desirable liquid hydrocarbon
    fuel for fuel cells and can be effectively
    utilized in internal combustion engines using
    existing technologies.
  • While all alternative fuels are expected to be
    more expensive to the consumer than present-day
    gasoline, methanol produced from coal is likely
    to be the least expensive of the fuels
    considered, if natural gas prices increase as
    projected.

10
DMFC
  • Uses a membrane as electrolyte and produce
    electricity directly from liquid methanol.
  • Efficient of fuel utilization
  • Simpler less costly fuel cell systems

11
Principles of DMFC
  • When provided with current, methanol is
    electrochemically oxidized at the anode electro
    catalyst to produce electrons which travel
    through the external circuit to the cathode and
    consumed with oxygen to form a reaction.
  • CH3OH 3/2O2 CO2 2H2O

12
  • Bob Hockaday holds a Motorola cell phone battery
    for scale in this photo taken at MHTX H.Q. in Los
    Alamos, December 1998. To his right is his "test
    rack" micro-DMFC apparatus which provides the
    electricity to operate the small black Nokia cell
    phone in the foreground. The hypo syringes on top
    of the rack are used to squirt windshield washer
    fluid (blue juice) fuel into the direct methanol
    fuel cell.

13
DMFCs for Potential Transportation Applications
  • A 5-cell stack operated at 100 Celsius with 2.8
    atm air generated 1 kW per liter of active stack
    volume.
  • With 0.50 V per cell, the 5-cell achieved a fuel
    utilization of 90 about 37 efficiency.
  • Catalyst loading was lowered to 5 gPt per kw,
    compared to about 2gPt per kW (current)

14
A Methanol Environment
Indy Race Car
Methanol Power plant
Methanol Fueled Vehicle
Methanol Pump
15
Zinc Air
Fuel cell modules contain 47 individual
air-breathing zinc-air cells, connected in a
series they discharge 17.4kWh before being
refueled. Electric fueled transit buses carry
three trays of 6 modules. This yields 312kWh of
on-board energy. Transportation Programs in the
U.S. and Germany are currently in place testing
Zinc-Air Electric transit bussing. A Zinc-Air
fuel cell yields a practical specific energy of
around 200Wh/kg and a specific peak power of
90W/kg. Lead-acid batteries typically achieve 30
Wh/kg. Nickel-metal hydride typically achieves
70Wh/kg.
16
Regenerative Fuel Cell
Unitized Regenerative Fuel Cells (URFC) operate
as both a generator and electrolyzer. When
coupled with lightweight fuel storage, URFCs
operate with an energy density of about
450Wh/kg. Transportation Regenerative Fuel Cells
act as energy storage systems for alternative
fuel systems. Example Photovoltaic systems
generate more power than what is need to fly an
airplane when the sun high. The energy storage
systems absorbs the excess power and accumulates
it during the day. The stored energy can then be
released at night. Possible Applications
automobiles, solar-powered aircraft, satellites,
and microspace-craft propulsion.
17
Alkaline
  • This is one of the oldest designs. It has been
    used in the U.S. space program since the 1960s.
    The AFC is very susceptible to contamination, so
    it requires pure hydrogen and oxygen.
  • High-temperature AFCs operate at temperatures
    between 100ºC and 250ºC (212ºF and 482ºF).
    However, more-recent AFC designs operate at lower
    temperatures of roughly 23ºC to 70ºC (74ºF to
    158ºF).

18
Alkaline Pro/Con
  • AFCs are high-performance fuel cells due to the
    rate at which chemical reactions take place in
    the cell. They are also very efficient, reaching
    efficiencies of 60 percent in space applications.
  • The disadvantage of this fuel cell type is that
    it is easily poisoned by carbon dioxide (CO2). In
    fact, even the small amount of CO2 in the air can
    affect the cell's operation, making it necessary
    to purify both the hydrogen and oxygen used in
    the cell. This purification process is costly.
    Susceptibility to poisoning also affects the
    cell's lifetime.
  • AFC stacks have been shown to maintain
    sufficiently stable operation for more than 8,000
    operating hours.

19
Biological Fuel Cells
  • Microorganisms or enzymes replace catalysts

20
Sugar in Fuel Cells
  • Anodes are covered in a conducting polymer
  • Prototypes produce 1.5 thousandths of an amp
  • The layer blocks large molecules but lets
    hydrogen through
  • Keeps the anode cleaner
  • Only useful for small applications

21
Platinum Anodes
  • The DoE confirms a sufficient supply of platinum
  • The DoE also confirms the expansion of the
    platinum industry

22
Platinum Replacements
  • Expensive, rare
  • Research is being done with silver anodes
  • John McMahon
  • Silver anodes require a rough pitted surface
  • Light is used to accelerate the reaction
  • These cells must be designed for use with light

23
Platinum Anode Poisoning
  • With traditional fuel cell designs platinum
    anodes get poisoned
  • This poisoning can be reduced with the use of
    platinum alloy anodes (Ru, Mo, W, Os1-3)
  • Platinum and ruthenium alloys prove most promising

24
Conclusion
  • Researching the materials used in fuel cells is
    crucial to the development of a hydrogen fueled
    economy
  • The PEMFC is the most widely used now
  • With more research, liquid methanol could produce
    enough energy to power a car
  • Since methanol is extracted from coal and coal
    reserves are five times larger than natural gas,
    methanol would be a very effective alternative
    power source
  • Regenerative and zinc based fuel cells arent
    very useful for transportation
  • Alkaline is strictly used in space applications
    because CO2 contaminates the oxygen and hydrogen
    in the cell
  • Biological and sugar cells are promising but put
    out low power not yet suitable for autos
  • Anode poisoning can be slowed with the use of
    platinum alloys in place of pure platinum
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