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Institute for Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3)

Fuel Cells

Tutorial for: Energy Concepts of the Future

March 13, 2011 | Uwe Reimer

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 1 / 20

Overview

Electrochemical converters

Fuel cell types

Principle of fuel cells

Summary

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 2 / 20

Electrochemical converters

Battery Fuel cell

fuel + electrodes = 'all in one'

charging / discharging

no emission

upscaling: safety issue, mass

fuel + electrodes = separately

refuelling

emission of product gas (water,...)

upscaling: easier

+_

+_

+ air

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 3 / 20

Electrochemical converters

Battery Fuel cell

fuel + electrodes = 'all in one'

charging / discharging

no emission

upscaling: safety issue, mass

fuel + electrodes = separately

refuelling

emission of product gas (water,...)

upscaling: easier

established market

needs electr. power infrastructure

efficiency 70 - 90 % (el. el.)

'new technology'

needs fuel infrastructure

efficiency 40 - 60 % (fuel el.)

+_

+_

+ air

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 4 / 20

Selected fuel cell types

PEFC (polymer electrolyte fuel cell)

TOP = 80 °C

Fuel = pure H2

Membrane = polymer (Nafion)

Catalyst = Pt

SOFC (solid oxide fuel cell)

TOP = 800 °C

Fuel = pure H2 and/ or CH4 (with H2O)

Membrane = solid oxide (ceramics)

Catalyst = Ni

. . .

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 5 / 20

Selected fuel cell types

TOP = 80 °C

Fuel = CH3OH (with H2O)

Membrane = polymer (Nafion)

Catalyst = Pt / Ru

PEFC (polymer electrolyte fuel cell)

TOP = 80 °C

Fuel = pure H2

Membrane = polymer (Nafion)

Catalyst = Pt

SOFC (solid oxide fuel cell)

TOP = 800 °C

Fuel = pure H2 and/ or CH4 (with H2O)

Membrane = solid oxide (ceramics)

Catalyst = Ni

. . .

DMFC (direct methanol fuel cell)

TOP = 160 °C

Fuel = H2 (reformate gas, 1 % CO)

Membrane = polymer (PBI)/ H3PO4

Catalyst = Pt

HT-PEFC (high temperature - polymer electrolyte fuel cell)

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 6 / 20

Fuel cell reaction: PEFC

over all

anode

cathode

H+ e-membrane

air / O2

H2

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 7 / 20

Nernst equation (voltage):

p reduced partial pressure (p/p0)

Faraday's law (current): I t = n z F 1 A/cm2 7 ml/min H2

F = Faradays constant

z = 2 for H2

Electric energy: Wel = E I t

Basic equations

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 8 / 20

Polarization curve

Basic idea:

Nernst voltage minus losses

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 9 / 20

Polarization curve

Basic idea:

Nernst voltage minus losses

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 10 / 20

Activation loss

anode

cathode

H+membrane e-

catalyst = carbon supported platinum

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 11 / 20

cathode

H+membrane

Activation loss

H+

Electric double layer at cat. surface

Electrons are transfered from metal

to adsorbed species

e-

Pt 5 nm

C 50 nm

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 12 / 20

Activation loss

j0 exchange current density

symmetry factor

z number of electrons in slowest step

(Tafel equation)

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 13 / 20

Transport loss / diffusion limitation

gas flow / channel

mass transport = convection

mass transport = diffusion

catalyst surface

consumption at catalyst

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 14 / 20

Transport loss / diffusion limitation

gas flow / channel

mass transport = convection

mass transport = diffusion

catalyst surface

consumption at catalyst

concentration gradient

mass transport limitation, if consumption > diffusion

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 15 / 20

Short summary: polarization curve

j0 exchange current density

jlim limiting current density

symmetry factor

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 16 / 20

Short summary: polarization curve

Present research:

Improve materials

Structure - function relationship

(mass transport and electrochem.)

kineticsthermodynamics

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 17 / 20

3 kW HT-PEFC

at FZ Jülich

Membrane: PBI/ H3PO4

TOP = 160 °C

Fuel: pure H2 or reformate gas with up to 1 % CO

Mass = 80 kg

Hardware example

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 18 / 20

3 kW HT-PEFC

Serenergy/ Denmark

Membrane: PBI/ H3PO4

Hardware example

TOP = 160 °C

Fuel: pure H2 or reformate gas with up to 1 % CO

Mass = 22 kg

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 19 / 20

Summary

Fuel cells and battery are not competitors.

Advantages of fuel cells: long term storage of fuel,

easier upscaling + safety

There is a physical limit to efficiency,

if large quantities of electric power have to be produced.

The 'market entry' demands specific infrastructure of

power grid and fuel supply.

Institute of Energy and Climate Research – Fuel Cells (IEK-3) 20 / 20

Efficient Carbon Capture for Coal Power Plants

June 20-22-2011, Frankfurt am Main

First Announcement

www.icepe2011.de

2nd International Conference on Energy Process Engineering:

Thank You for Your Attention!