Title: How Fuel Cells Work
1How Fuel Cells Work
- Fuel Cells (????)
- Making power more efficiently and with less
pollution.
2Fuel Cell- an electrochemical energy conversion
device
- To convert the chemicals hydrogen and oxygen into
water, and in the process it produces
electricity. - Battery (??) the other electrochemical device
that we are all familiar. - A battery has all of its chemicals stored inside,
and it converts those chemicals into electricity
too. - This means that a battery eventually "goes dead"
and you either throw it away or recharge it.
3For a fuel cell
- Chemicals constantly flow into the cell so it
never goes dead. - As long as there is a flow of chemicals into the
cell, - the electricity flows out of the cell.
- Most fuel cells in use today use hydrogen and
oxygen as the chemicals.
4Fuel Cell Descriptions
- Fuel Cells generate electricity through an
electrochemical process - In which the energy stored in a fuel is converted
directly into DC electricity. - Because electrical energy is generated without
combusting fuel, - Fuel cells are extremely attractive from an
environmental stand point.
5Attractive characteristics of Fuel Cell
- High energy conversion efficiency
- Modular design
- Very low chemical and acoustical pollution
- Fuel flexibility
- Cogeneration capability
- Rapid load response
6A functioning cell in a Solid Oxide Fuel Cell
stack
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8- It consists of three components - a cathode, an
anode, and an electrolyte sandwiched between the
two. - Oxygen from the air flows through the cathode
- A fuel gas containing hydrogen, such as methane,
flows past the anode. - Negatively charged oxygen ions migrate through
the electrolyte membrane react with the hydrogen
to form water, - The reacts with
- the methane fuel
- to form hydrogen (H2)
- carbon dioxide (CO2).
9- This electrochemical reaction generates
electrons, which flow from the anode to an
external load and back to the cathode, - a final step that both completes the circuit and
supplies electric power. - To increase voltage output, several fuel cells
are stacked together to form the heart of a clean
power generator.
10Cool Fuel Cells
- Fuel cells promise to be the environmentally-frien
dly power source of the future, - but some types run too hot to be practical.
NASA-funded research may have a solution.
11All fuel cells have the same basic operating
principle.
- An input fuel is catalytically reacted (electrons
removed from the fuel elements) in the fuel cell
to create an electric current.
- Fuel cells consist of an electrolyte material
which is sandwiched in between two thin
electrodes (porous anode and cathode). - The input fuel passes over the anode (and oxygen
over the cathode) where it catalytically splits
into ions and electrons. - The electrons go through an external circuit to
serve an electric load while the ions move
through the electrolyte toward the oppositely
charged electrode. - At the electrode, ions combine to create
by-products, primarily water and CO2. Depending
on the input fuel and electrolyte, different
chemical reactions will occur.
12Basic Configuration
13PEMFC
14Animation of PEMFC
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18- With thousands of diaphragm compressor
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handle the difficult applications. PPI has the
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19SUSTAINABLE Transport
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23SOLID OXIDE FUEL CELL STACK PROVIDER
- HTceramix's SOFConnexTM based stack
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25Applications of Fuel cells
26Woking Park Fuel Cell CHP schematic
27 28Four primary types of fuel cells
- They are based on the electrolyte employed
- Phosphoric Acid Fuel Cell
- Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell
- Solid Oxide Fuel Cell
- Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell
29Phosphoric Acid Fuel Cells -PAFCs
- The most mature fuel cell technology in terms of
system development and commercialization
activities. - Has been under development for more than 20 years
- Has received a total worldwide investment in the
development and demonstration of the technology
in excess of 500 million. - The PAFC was selected for substantial development
a number of years ago because of the belief that,
among the low temperature fuel cells, - It was the only technology which showed relative
tolerance for reformed hydrocarbon fuels and thus
could have widespread applicability in the near
term.
30PAFC Design and Operation
- The PAFC uses liquid phosphoric acid as the
electrolyte. - The phosphoric acid is contained in a Teflon
bonded silicone carbide matrix. - The small pore structure of this matrix
preferentially keeps the acid in place through
capillary action. - Some acid may be entrained in the fuel or oxidant
streams and addition of acid may be required
after many hours of operation. - Platinum catalyzed, porous carbon electrodes are
used on both the fuel (anode) and oxidant
(cathode) sides of the electrolyte.
31- Fuel and oxidant gases are supplied to the backs
of the porous electrodes by parallel grooves
formed into carbon or carbon-composite plates. - These plates are electrically conductive and
conduct electrons from an anode to the cathode of
the adjacent cell. - In most designs, the plates are "bi-polar" in
that they have grooves on both sides - one side
supplies fuel to the anode of one cell, while the
other side supplies air or oxygen to the cathode
of the adjacent cell. - The byproduct water is removed as steam on the
cathode (air or oxygen) side of each cell by
flowing excess oxidant past the backs of the
electrodes. - This water removal procedure requires that the
system be operated at temperatures around 375oF
(190oC). - At lower temperatures, the product water will
dissolve in the electrolyte and not be removed as
steam. At approximately 410oF (210oC), the
phosphoric acid begins to decompose.
32- The byproduct water is removed as steam on the
cathode (air or oxygen) side of each cell by
flowing excess oxidant past the backs of the
electrodes. - This water removal procedure requires that the
system be operated at temperatures around 375oF
(190oC). - At lower temperatures, the product water will
dissolve in the electrolyte and not be removed as
steam. At approximately 410oF (210oC), the
phosphoric acid begins to decompose. - Excess heat is removed from the fuel cell stack
by providing carbon plates containing cooling
channels every few cells. - Either air or a liquid coolant, such as water,
can be passed through these channels to remove
excess heat.
33Electrochemical reactions in PAFC
- At the anode
- Hydrogen is split into two hydrogen ions (H),
which pass through the electrolyte to the
cathode, and - two electrons which pass through the external
circuit (electric load) to the cathode. - At the cathode
- the hydrogen, electrons and oxygen combine to
form water.
34Electrochemical reactions in PAFC
35PAFC Performance Characteristics
- PAFC power plant designs show electrical
efficiencies in the range from 36 (HHV) to 42
(HHV). - The higher efficiency designs operate with
pressurized reactants. - The higher efficiency pressurized design requires
more components and likely higher cost. - PAFC power plants supply usable thermal energy at
an efficiency of 37 (HHV) to 41 (HHV). - A portion of the thermal energy can be supplied
at temperatures of 250oF to 300oF. - However, the majority of the thermal energy is
supplied at 150oF. - The PAFC has a power density of 160-175 watts/ft2
of active cell area
36Molten Carbonate Fuel Cells - MCFC
- A molten carbonate salt mixture is used as its
electrolyte. - They evolved from work in the 1960's aimed at
producing a fuel cell which would operated
directly on coal. - While direct operation on coal seems less likely
today, - The operation on coal-derived fuel gases or
natural gas is viable.
37Molten Carbonate Salt used as Electrolyte in MCFC
- A molten carbonate salt mixture is used as its
electrolyte. - The composition of the electrolyte (molten
carbonate salt mixture) varies, but usually
consists of lithium carbonate and potassium
carbonate. - At the operating temperature of about 650oC
(1200oF), the salt mixture is liquid and a good
ionic conductor. - The electrolyte is suspended in a porous,
insulating and chemically inert ceramic (LiAlO3)
matrix.
38Reactions in MCFC
- The anode process involves a reaction between
hydrogen and carbonate ions (CO3) from the
electrolyte. - The reaction produces water and carbon dioxide
(CO2) while releasing electrons to the anode.
- The cathode process combines oxygen and CO2 from
the oxidant stream with electrons from the
cathode to produce carbonate ions which enter the
electrolyte. - The need for CO2 in the oxidant stream requires a
system for collecting CO2 from the anode exhaust
and mixing it with the cathode feed stream.
39Reactions in MCFC
40Description of reactions in MCFCs
- The anode process involves a reaction between
hydrogen and carbonate ions (CO3) from the
electrolyte. - The reaction produces water and carbon dioxide
(CO2) while releasing electrons to the anode. - The cathode process combines oxygen and CO2 from
the oxidant stream with electrons from the
cathode to produce carbonate ions which enter the
electrolyte. - The need for CO2 in the oxidant stream requires a
system for collecting CO2 from the anode exhaust
and mixing it with the cathode feed stream.
41- As the operating temperature increases,
- the theoretical operating voltage for a fuel cell
decreases and with it the maximum theoretical
fuel efficiency. - On the other hand, increasing the operating
temperature increases the rate of the
electrochemical reaction and - Thus increases the current which can be obtained
at a given voltage. - The net effect for the MCFC is that the real
operating voltage is higher than the operating
voltage for the PAFC at the same current density.
- The higher operating voltage of the MCFC means
that more power is available at a higher fuel
efficiency from a MCFC than from a PAFC of the
same electrode area. - As size and cost scale roughly with electrode
area, this suggests that a MCFC should be smaller
and less expensive than a "comparable" PAFC.
42- As size and cost scale roughly with electrode
area, this suggests that a MCFC should be smaller
and less expensive than a "comparable" PAFC. - The MCFC also produces excess heat at a
temperature which is high enough to yield high
pressure steam which may be fed to a turbine to
generate additional electricity. - In combined cycle operation, electrical
efficiencies in excess of 60 (HHV) have been
suggested for mature MCFC systems. - The MCFC operates at between 1110F (600C) and
1200F (650C) which is necessary to achieve
sufficient conductivity of the electrolyte. - To maintain this operating temperature, a higher
volume of air is passed through the cathode for
cooling purposes.
43- As mentioned above, the high operating
temperature of the MCFC offers the possibility
that it could operate directly on gaseous
hydrocarbon fuels such as natural gas. - The natural gas would be reformed to produce
hydrogen within the fuel cell itself. - The need for CO2 in the oxidant stream requires
that CO2 from the spent anode gas be collected
and mixed with the incoming air stream. - Before this can be done, any residual hydrogen in
the spent fuel stream must be burned. - Future systems may incorporate membrane
separators to remove the hydrogen for
recirculation back to the fuel stream.
44- At cell operating temperatures of 650oC (1200oF)
noble metal catalysts are not required. - The anode is a highly porous sintered nickel
powder, alloyed with chromium to prevent
agglomeration and creep at operating
temperatures. - The cathode is a porous nickel oxide material
doped with lithium. - Significant technology has been developed to
provide electrode structures which position the
electrolyte with respect to the electrodes and
maintain that position while allowing for some
electrolyte boil-off during operation. - The electrolyte boil-off has an insignificant
impact on cell stack life.
45- A more significant factor of life expectancy has
to do with corrosion of the cathode. - The MCFC operating temperature is about 650oC
(1200oF). - At this temperature the salt mixture is liquid
and is a good conductor. - The cell performance is sensitive to operating
temperature. - A change in cell temperature from 650oC (1200oF)
to 600oC (1110oF) results in a drop in cell
voltage of almost 15. - The reduction in cell voltage is due to increased
ionic and electrical resistance and a reduction
in electrode kinetics.
46Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
- The Solid Oxide Fuel Cell (SOFC) uses a ceramic,
solid-phase electrolyte which reduces corrosion
considerations and eliminates the electrolyte
management problems associated with the liquid
electrolyte fuel cells. - To achieve adequate ionic conductivity in such a
ceramic, however, the system must operate at
about 1000oC (1830oF). - At that temperature, internal reforming of
carbonaceous fuels should be possible, and the
waste heat from such a device would be easily
utilized by conventional thermal electricity
generating plants to yield excellent fuel
efficiency.
47- The fuel cell will compete with many other types
of energy conversion devices, including - the gas turbine in city's power plant,
- the gasoline engine in your car and
- the battery in your laptop.
- Combustion engines like the turbine and the
gasoline engine burn fuels and - use the pressure created by the expansion of the
gases to do mechanical work. - Batteries converted chemical energy back into
electrical energy when needed. - Fuel cells should do both tasks more efficiently.
- A fuel cell provides a DC (direct current)
voltage that can be used to power motors, lights
or any number of electrical appliances.
48Classification of Fuel Cells
- 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. - Some types of fuel cells work well for use in
stationary power generation plants. - Others may be useful for small portable
applications or for powering cars. - The proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) is
one of the most promising technologies. - This is the type of fuel cell that will end up
powering cars, buses and maybe even your house.
Let's take a look at how they work...
49Tiny Fuel Cell to Power Sensors
- A fuel cell prototype that is the size of a
pencil eraser and can deliver small amounts of
electricity was developed at Case Western Reserve
University (CWRU).
- The fuel cells are 5 mm3 in volume and generate
10 mW of power with short pulses of up to 100 mW. - The cell power is so limited
- There is no practical consumer use yet.
- A cell phone, e.g., needs 500 mW.
- The first use will be in sensors for the
military.
50Microfuel cell
- The prototype microfuel cell uses an
electrochemical process to directly convert
energy from hydrogen into electricity. - The fuel cell works like a battery, using an
anode and cathode, positive and negative
electrodes (solid electrical conductors), with an
electrolyte. - The electrolyte can be made of various materials
or solutions. The hydrogen flows into the anode
and the molecules are split into protons and
electrons. - The protons flow through the electrolyte, while
the electrons take a different path, creating an
electrical current. - At the other end of the fuel cell, oxygen is
pulled in from the air and flows into the
cathode. - The hydrogen protons and electrons reunite in the
cathode and chemically bond with the oxygen atoms
to form water molecules. - Theoretically, the only waste product produced by
a fuel cell is water. - Fuel cells that extract hydrogen from natural gas
or another hydrocarbon will emit some carbon
dioxide as a byproduct, but in much smaller
amounts than those produced by traditional energy
sources.
51PEMFC Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell
Animation fuel-cell-animation.swf
- The cell uses one of the simplest reactions of
any fuel cell.
52Four Basic Elements in a PEMFC
- Anode the negative post of the fuel cell, has
several jobs. - It conducts the electrons that are freed from the
hydrogen molecules - so that they can be used in an external circuit.
- It has channels etched into it that disperse the
hydrogen gas equally over the surface of the
catalyst. - Cathode the positive post of the fuel cell,
- has channels etched into it that distribute 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.
53Four Basic Elements in a PEMFC
- 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.
54Chemistry of a Fuel Cell
- Anode side 2H2 ? 4H 4e-
- Cathode side O2 4H 4e- ? 2H2O
- Net reaction 2H2 O2 ? 2H2O
55Animation of a fuel cell workingfuel-cell-animati
on.swf
- The pressurized hydrogen gas (H2) entering the
fuel cell on the anode side. - This gas is forced through the catalyst by the
pressure. When an H2 molecule comes in contact
with the platinum on the catalyst, it splits into
two H ions and two electrons (e-). - The electrons are conducted through the anode,
where they make their way through the external
circuit (doing useful work such as turning a
motor) and return to the cathode side of the fuel
cell.
56- Meanwhile, on the cathode side of the fuel cell,
oxygen gas (O2) is being forced through the
catalyst, where it forms two oxygen atoms. - Each of these atoms has a strong negative charge.
- This negative charge attracts the two H ions
through the membrane, where they combine with an
oxygen atom and two of the electrons from the
external circuit to form a water molecule (H2O). - This reaction in a single fuel cell produces only
about 0.7 volts. - To get this voltage up to a reasonable level,
many separate fuel cells must be combined to form
a fuel-cell stack (???).
57- PEMFCs operate at a fairly low temperature (about
176oF80oC), - It 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.
58Problems with Fuel Cells
- The fuel cell uses oxygen and hydrogen to produce
electricity. - The oxygen required for a fuel cell comes from
the air. - In fact, in the PEM fuel cell, ordinary air is
pumped into the cathode. - The hydrogen is not so readily available,
however. - Hydrogen has some limitations that make it
impractical for use in most applications. - For instance, you don't have a hydrogen pipeline
coming to your house, and you can't pull up to a
hydrogen pump at your local gas station. - Hydrogen is difficult to store and distribute, so
it would be much more convenient if fuel cells
could use fuels that are more readily available. - This problem is addressed by a device called a
reformer. - A reformer turns hydrocarbon or alcohol fuels
into hydrogen, which is then fed to the fuel
cell.