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Details of fuel cell
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A fuel cell is an electrochemical conversion device. It
produces electricity from fuel (on the anode side) and an oxidant (on the
cathode side), which react in the presence of an electrolyte. The reactants flow
into the cell, and the reaction products flow out of it, while the electrolyte
remains within it. Fuel cells can operate virtually continuously as long as the
necessary flows are maintained.
Fuel cells are different from electrochemical cell batteries
in that they consume reactant, which must be replenished, whereas batteries
store electrical energy chemically in a closed system. Additionally, while the
electrodes within a battery react and change as a battery is charged or
discharged, a fuel cell's electrodes are catalytic and relatively stable.
Many combinations of fuel and oxidant are possible. A
hydrogen cell uses hydrogen as fuel and oxygen as oxidant. Other fuels include
hydrocarbons and alcohols. Other oxidants include air, chlorine and chlorine
dioxide.
Fuel cell design
A fuel cell works by catalysis, separating the component electrons and protons
of the reactant fuel, and forcing the electrons to travel though a circuit,
hence converting them to electrical power. The catalyst is typically comprised
of a platinum group metal or alloy. Another catalytic process takes the
electrons back in, combining them with the protons and the oxidant to form waste
products (typically simple compounds like water and carbon dioxide).
In the archetypal hydrogen–oxygen proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC)
design, a proton-conducting polymer membrane, (the electrolyte), separates the
anode and cathode sides. This was called a "solid polymer electrolyte fuel cell"
(SPEFC) in the early 1970s, before the proton exchange mechanism was
well-understood. (Notice that "polymer electrolyte membrane" and "proton
exchange membrane" result in the same acronym.)
On the anode side, hydrogen diffuses to the anode catalyst
where it later dissociates into protons and electrons. These protons often react
with oxidants causing them to become what is commonly referred to as
multi-facilitated proton membranes (MFPM). The protons are conducted through the
membrane to the cathode, but the electrons are forced to travel in an external
circuit (supplying power) because the membrane is electrically insulating. On
the cathode catalyst, oxygen molecules react with the electrons (which have
traveled through the external circuit) and protons to form water — in this
example, the only waste product, either liquid or vapor.
In addition to this pure hydrogen type, there are hydrocarbon
fuels for fuel cells, including diesel, methanol and chemical hydrides. The
waste products with these types of fuel are carbon dioxide and water.
The materials used in fuel cells differ by type. The
electrode–bipolar plates are usually made of metal, nickel or carbon nanotubes,
and are coated with a catalyst (like platinum, nano iron powders or palladium)
for higher efficiency. Carbon paper separates them from the electrolyte. The
electrolyte could be ceramic or a membrane.
A typical PEM fuel cell produces a voltage from 0.6 V to 0.7
V at full rated load. Voltage decreases as current increases, due to several
factors:
* Activation loss
* Ohmic loss (voltage drop due to resistance of the cell components and
interconnects)
* Mass transport loss (depletion of reactants at catalyst sites under high
loads, causing rapid loss of voltage)
To deliver the desired amount of energy, the fuel cells can be combined in
series and parallel circuits, where series yield higher voltage, and parallel
allows a stronger current to be drawn. Such a design is called a fuel cell
stack. Further, the cell surface area can be increased, to allow stronger
current from each cell.
Fuel cell design issues
* Costs. In 2002, typical cells had a catalyst content of US$1000 per kilowatt
of electric power output. In 2008 UTC Power has 400kw Fuel cells for $1,000,000
per 400kW installed costs. The goal is to reduce the cost in order to compete
with current market technologies including gasoline internal combustion engines.
Many companies are working on techniques to reduce cost in a variety of ways
including reducing the amount of platinum needed in each individual cell.
Ballard Power Systems have experiments with a catalyst enhanced with carbon silk
which allows a 30% reduction (1 mg/cm² to 0.7 mg/cm²) in platinum usage without
reduction in performance.
* The production costs of the PEM (proton exchange membrane).
The Nafion membrane currently costs €400/m². This, and the Toyota PEM and 3M PEM
membrane can be replaced with the ITM Power membrane (a hydrocarbon polymer),
resulting in a price of ~€4/m². in 2005 Ballard Power Systems announced that its
fuel cells will use Solupor, a porous polyethylene film patented by DSM.
* Water and air management (in PEMFCs). In this type of fuel
cell, the membrane must be hydrated, requiring water to be evaporated at
precisely the same rate that it is produced. If water is evaporated too quickly,
the membrane dries, resistance across it increases, and eventually it will
crack, creating a gas "short circuit" where hydrogen and oxygen combine
directly, generating heat that will damage the fuel cell. If the water is
evaporated too slowly, the electrodes will flood, preventing the reactants from
reaching the catalyst and stopping the reaction. Methods to manage water in
cells are being developed like electroosmotic pumps focusing on flow control.
Just as in a combustion engine, a steady ratio between the reactant and oxygen
is necessary to keep the fuel cell operating efficiently.
* Temperature management. The same temperature must be
maintained throughout the cell in order to prevent destruction of the cell
through thermal loading. This is particularly challenging as the 2H2 + O2 ->
2H2O reaction is highly exothermic, so a large quantity of heat is generated
within the fuel cell.
* Durability, service life, and special requirements for some
type of cells. Stationary applications typically require more than 40,000 hours
of reliable operation at a temperature of -35 °C to 40 °C, while automotive fuel
cells require a 5,000 hour lifespan (the equivalent of 150,000 miles) under
extreme temperatures. Automotive engines must also be able to start reliably at
-30 °C and have a high power to volume ratio (typically 2.5 kW per liter).
* Limited carbon monoxide tolerance of the anode.
History
The principle of the fuel cell was discovered by German scientist Christian
Friedrich Schönbein in 1838 and published in the January 1839 edition of the
"Philosophical Magazine". Based on this work, the first fuel cell was developed
by Welsh scientist Sir William Robert Grove in 1845. Another source, however,
reports that Grove invented the fuel cell in 1839. The fuel cell he made used
similar materials to today's phosphoric-acid fuel cell. In 1955, W. Thomas
Grubb, a chemist working for the General Electric Company (GE), further modified
the original fuel cell design by using a sulphonated polystyrene ion-exchange
membrane as the electrolyte. Three years later another GE chemist, Leonard
Niedrach, devised a way of depositing platinum onto the membrane, which served
as catalyst for the necessary hydrogen oxidation and oxygen reduction reactions.
This became known as the 'Grubb-Niedrach fuel cell'. GE went on to develop this
technology with NASA and McDonnell Aircraft, leading to its use during Project
Gemini. This was the first commercial use of a fuel cell. It wasn't until 1959
that British engineer Francis Thomas Bacon successfully developed a 5 kW
stationary fuel cell. In 1959, a team led by Harry Ihrig built a 15 kW fuel cell
tractor for Allis-Chalmers which was demonstrated across the US at state fairs.
This system used potassium hydroxide as the electrolyte and compressed hydrogen
and oxygen as the reactants. Later in 1959, Bacon and his colleagues
demonstrated a practical five-kilowatt unit capable of powering a welding
machine. In the 1960s, Pratt and Whitney licensed Bacon's U.S. patents for use
in the U.S. space program to supply electricity and drinking water (hydrogen and
oxygen being readily available from the spacecraft tanks).
United Technology Corp.'s UTC Power subsidiary was the first
company to manufacture and commercialize a large, stationary fuel cell system
for use as a co-generation power plant in hospitals, universities and large
office buildings. UTC Power continues to market this fuel cell as the PureCell
200, a 200 kW system. UTC Power continues to be the sole supplier of fuel cells
to NASA for use in space vehicles, having supplied the Apollo missions, and
currently the Space Shuttle program, and is developing fuel cells for
automobiles, buses, and cell phone towers; the company has demonstrated the
first fuel cell capable of starting under freezing conditions with its proton
exchange membrane automotive fuel cell.
Efficiency
Fuel cell efficiency
The efficiency of a fuel cell is dependent on the amount of power drawn from it.
Drawing more power means drawing more current, which increases the losses in the
fuel cell. As a general rule, the more power (current) drawn, the lower the
efficiency. Most losses manifest themselves as a voltage drop in the cell, so
the efficiency of a cell is almost proportional to its voltage. For this reason,
it is common to show graphs of voltage versus current (so-called polarization
curves) for fuel cells. A typical cell running at 0.7 V has an efficiency of
about 50%, meaning that 50% of the energy content of the hydrogen is converted
into electrical energy; the remaining 50% will be converted into heat.
(Depending on the fuel cell system design, some fuel might leave the system
unreacted, constituting an additional loss.)
For a hydrogen cell operating at standard conditions with no reactant leaks, the
efficiency is equal to the cell voltage divided by 1.48 V, based on the
enthalpy, or heating value, of the reaction. For the same cell, the second law
efficiency is equal to cell voltage divided by 1.23 V. (This voltage varies with
fuel used, and quality and temperature of the cell.) The difference between
these number represents the difference between the reaction's enthalpy and Gibbs
free energy. This difference always appears as heat, along with any losses in
electrical conversion efficiency.
Fuel cells are not constrained by the maximum Carnot cycle
efficiency as combustion engines are, because they do not operate with a thermal
cycle. At times this is misrepresented by saying that fuel cells are exempt from
the laws of thermodynamics, because most people think of thermodynamics in terms
of combustion processes (enthalpy of formation). The laws of thermodynamics also
hold for chemical processes (Gibbs free energy) like fuel cells, but the maximum
theoretical efficiency is higher (83% efficient at 298K ) than the Otto cycle
thermal efficiency (60% for compression ratio of 10 and specific heat ratio of
1.4). Of course, comparing limits imposed by thermodynamics is not a good
predictor of practically achievable efficiencies. Also, if propulsion is the
goal, electrical output of the fuel cell has to still be converted into
mechanical power with the corresponding inefficiency. In reference to the
exemption claim, the correct claim is that the "limitations imposed by the
second law of thermodynamics on the operation of fuel cells are much less severe
than the limitations imposed on conventional energy conversion systems".
Consequently, they can have very high efficiencies in converting chemical energy
to electrical energy, especially when they are operated at low power density,
and using pure hydrogen and oxygen as reactants.
In practice
For a fuel cell operated on air (rather than bottled oxygen), losses due to the
air supply system must also be taken into account. This refers to the
pressurization of the air and humidifying it. This reduces the efficiency
significantly and brings it near to that of a compression ignition engine.
Furthermore fuel cell efficiency decreases as load increases.
The tank-to-wheel efficiency of a fuel cell vehicle is about
45% at low loads and shows average values of about 36% when a driving cycle like
the NEDC (New European Driving Cycle) is used as test procedure.The comparable
NEDC value for a Diesel vehicle is 22%.
It is also important to take losses due to fuel production,
transportation, and storage into account. Fuel cell vehicles running on
compressed hydrogen may have a power-plant-to-wheel efficiency of 22% if the
hydrogen is stored as high-pressure gas, and 17% if it is stored as liquid
hydrogen.
Fuel cells cannot store energy like a battery, but in some
applications, such as stand-alone power plants based on discontinuous sources
such as solar or wind power, they are combined with electrolyzers and storage
systems to form an energy storage system. The overall efficiency (electricity to
hydrogen and back to electricity) of such plants (known as round-trip
efficiency) is between 30 and 50%, depending on conditions.While a much cheaper
lead-acid battery might return about 90%, the electrolyzer/fuel cell system can
store indefinite quantities of hydrogen, and is therefore better suited for
long-term storage.
Solid-oxide fuel cells produce exothermic heat from the
recombination of the oxygen and hydrogen. The ceramic can run as hot as 800
degrees Celsius. This heat can be captured and used to heat water in a micro
combined heat and power (m-CHP) application. When the heat is captured, total
efficiency can reach 80-90%. CHP units are being developed today for the
European home market.
Fuel cell applications
Fuel cells are very useful as power sources in remote locations, such as
spacecraft, remote weather stations, large parks, rural locations, and in
certain military applications. A fuel cell system running on hydrogen can be
compact and lightweight, and have no major moving parts. Because fuel cells have
no moving parts and do not involve combustion, in ideal conditions they can
achieve up to 99.9999% reliability.This equates to around one minute of down
time in a two year period.
A new application is micro combined heat and power, which is cogeneration for
family homes, office buildings and factories. This type of system generates
constant electric power (selling excess power back to the grid when it is not
consumed), and at the same time produces hot air and water from the waste heat.
A lower fuel-to-electricity conversion efficiency is tolerated (typically
15-20%), because most of the energy not converted into electricity is utilized
as heat. Some heat is lost with the exhaust gas just as in a normal furnace, so
the combined heat and power efficiency is still lower than 100%, typically
around 80%. In terms of exergy however, the process is inefficient, and one
could do better by maximizing the electricity generated and then using the
electricity to drive a heat pump. Phosphoric-acid fuel cells (PAFC) comprise the
largest segment of existing CHP products worldwide and can provide combined
efficiencies close to 90%(35-50% electric + remainder as thermal)
Molten-carbonate fuel cells have also been installed in these applications, and
solid-oxide fuel cell prototypes exist.
Since electrolyzer systems do not store fuel in themselves,
but rather rely on external storage units, they can be successfully applied in
large-scale energy storage, rural areas being one example. In this application,
batteries would have to be largely oversized to meet the storage demand, but
fuel cells only need a larger storage unit (typically cheaper than an
electrochemical device).
One such pilot program is operating on Stuart Island in
Washington State. There the Stuart Island Energy Initiative has built a
complete, closed-loop system: Solar panels power an electrolyzer which makes
hydrogen. The hydrogen is stored in a 500 gallon tank at 200 PSI, and runs a
ReliOn fuel cell to provide full electric back-up to the off-the-grid residence.
The SIEI website gives extensive technical details.
The world's first Fuel Cell Ship HYDRA used an AFC system
with 6.5 kW net output.
Suggested applications
* Base load power plants
* Electric and hybrid vehicles.
* Auxiliary power
* Off-grid power supply
* Notebook computers for applications where AC charging may not be available for
weeks at a time.
* Portable charging docks for small electronics (e.g. a belt clip that charges
your cell phone or PDA).
* Smartphones with high power consumption due to large displays and additional
features like GPS might be equipped with micro fuel cells.
Hydrogen transportation and refueling
The first public hydrogen refueling station was opened in Reykjavík, Iceland in
April 2003. This station serves three buses built by DaimlerChrysler that are in
service in the public transport net of Reykjavík. The station produces the
hydrogen it needs by itself, with an electrolyzing unit (produced by Norsk
Hydro), and does not need refilling: all that enters is electricity and water.
Royal Dutch Shell is also a partner in the project. The station has no roof, in
order to allow any leaked hydrogen to escape to the atmosphere.
The GM 1966 Electrovan was the automotive industry's first
attempt at an automobile powered by a hydrogen fuel cell. The Electrovan, which
weighed more than twice as much as a normal van, could travel up to 70mph for 30
seconds.
The 2001 Chrysler Natrium used its own on-board hydrogen
processor. It produces hydrogen for the fuel cell by reacting sodium borohydride
fuel with Borax, both of which Chrysler claimed were naturally occurring in
great quantity in the United States. The hydrogen produces electric power in the
fuel cell for near-silent operation and a range of 300 miles without impinging
on passenger space. Chrysler also developed vehicles which separated hydrogen
from gasoline in the vehicle, the purpose being to reduce emissions without
relying on a nonexistent hydrogen infrastructure and to avoid large storage
tanks.
In 2005 the British firm Intelligent Energy produced the
first ever working hydrogen run motorcycle called the ENV (Emission Neutral
Vehicle). The motorcycle holds enough fuel to run for four hours, and to travel
100 miles in an urban area, at a top speed of 50 miles per hour.Honda is also
going to offer fuel-cell motorcycles.
There are numerous prototype or production cars and buses
based on fuel cell technology being researched or manufactured. Research is
ongoing at a variety of motor car manufacturers. Honda has announced the release
of a hydrogen vehicle in 2008.
Type 212 submarines use fuel cells to remain submerged for
weeks without the need to surface.
Boeing researchers and industry partners throughout Europe are planning to
conduct experimental flight tests in 2007 of a manned airplane powered only by a
fuel cell and lightweight batteries. The Fuel Cell Demonstrator Airplane
research project was completed recently and thorough systems integration testing
is now under way in preparation for upcoming ground and flight testing. The
Boeing demonstrator uses a Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) fuel cell/lithium-ion
battery hybrid system to power an electric motor, which is coupled to a
conventional propeller.
Market structure
Not all geographic markets are ready for SOFC powered m-CHP appliances.
Currently, the regions that lead the race in Distributed Generation and
deployment of fuel cell m-CHP units are the EU and Japan.
Hydrogen economy
Main article: Hydrogen economy
Electrochemical extraction of energy from hydrogen via fuel cells is an
especially clean method of meeting power requirements, but not an efficient one,
due to the necessity of adding large amounts of energy to either water or
hydrocarbon fuels in order to produce the hydrogen. Additionally, during the
extraction of hydrogen from hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide is released. Although
this gas is artificially converted into carbon dioxide, such a method of
extracting hydrogen remains environmentally injurious. It must however be noted
that regarding the concept of the hydrogen vehicle, burning/combustion of
hydrogen in an internal combustion engine (IC/ICE) is often confused with the
electrochemical process of generating electricity via fuel cells (FC) in which
there is no combustion (though there is a small byproduct of heat in the
reaction). Both processes require the establishment of a hydrogen economy before
they may be considered commercially viable, and even then, the aforementioned
energy costs make a hydrogen economy of questionable environmental value.
Hydrogen combustion is similar to petroleum combustion, and like petroleum
combustion, still results in nitrogen oxides as a by-product of the combustion,
which lead to smog. Hydrogen combustion, like that of petroleum, is limited by
the Carnot efficiency, but is completely different from the hydrogen fuel cell's
chemical conversion process of hydrogen to electricity and water without
combustion. Hydrogen fuel cells emit only water during use, while producing
carbon dioxide emissions during the majority of hydrogen production, which comes
from natural gas. Direct methane or natural gas conversion (whether IC or FC)
also generate carbon dioxide emissions, but direct hydrocarbon conversion in
high-temperature fuel cells produces lower carbon dioxide emissions than either
combustion of the same fuel (due to the higher efficiency of the fuel cell
process compared to combustion), and also lower carbon dioxide emissions than
hydrogen fuel cells, which use methane less efficiently than high-temperature
fuel cells by first converting it to high-purity hydrogen by steam reforming.
Although hydrogen can also be produced by electrolysis of water using renewable
energy, at present less than 3% of hydrogen is produced in this way.
Hydrogen is an energy carrier, and not an energy source, because it is usually
produced from other energy sources via petroleum combustion, wind power, or
solar photovoltaic cells. Hydrogen may be produced from subsurface reservoirs of
methane and natural gas by a combination of steam reforming with the water gas
shift reaction, from coal by coal gasification, or from oil shale by oil shale
gasification.Electrolysis, which requires electricity, and high-temperature
electrolysis/thermochemical production, which requires high temperatures (ideal
for nuclear reactors), are two primary methods for the extraction of hydrogen
from water.
As of 2005, 49.7% of the electricity produced in the United
States comes from coal, 19.3% comes from nuclear, 18.7% comes from natural gas,
6.5% from hydroelectricity, 3% from petroleum and the remaining 2.8% mostly
coming from geothermal, solar and biomass.When hydrogen is produced through
electrolysis, the energy comes from these sources. Though the fuel cell itself
will only emit heat and water as waste, pollution is often caused when
generating the electricity required to produce the hydrogen that the fuel cell
uses as its power source (for example, when coal, oil, or natural gas-generated
electricity is used). This will be the case unless the hydrogen is produced
using electricity generated by hydroelectric, geothermal, solar, wind or other
clean power sources (which may or may not include nuclear power, depending on
one's attitude to the nuclear waste byproducts); hydrogen is only as clean as
the energy sources used to produce it. A holistic approach has to take into
consideration the impacts of an extended hydrogen scenario, including the
production, the use and the disposal of infrastructure and energy converters.
Nowadays low temperature fuel cell stacks proton exchange
membrane fuel cell (PEMFC), direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC) and phosphoric acid
fuel cell (PAFC) make extensive use of catalysts. Impurities poison or foul the
catalysts (reducing activity and efficiency), thus higher catalyst densities are
required.Limited reserves of platinum quicken the synthesis of an inorganic
complex very similar to the catalytic iron-sulfur core of bacterial hydrogenase
to step in.Although platinum is seen by some as one of the major "showstoppers"
to mass market fuel cell commercialization companies, most predictions of
platinum running out and/or platinum prices soaring do not take into account
effects of thrifting (reduction in catalyst loading) and recycling. Recent
research at Brookhaven National Laboratory could lead to the replacement of
platinum by a gold-palladium coating which may be less susceptible to poisoning
and thereby improve fuel cell lifetime considerably.Current targets for a
transport PEM fuel cells are 0.2 g/kW Pt – which is a factor of 5 decrease over
current loadings – and recent comments from major original equipment
manufacturers (OEMs) indicate that this is possible. Also it is fully
anticipated that recycling of fuel cells components, including platinum, will
kick-in. High-temperature fuel cells, including molten carbonate fuel cells (MCFC's)
and solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC's), do not use platinum as catalysts, but
instead use cheaper materials such as nickel and nickel oxide, which are
considerably more abundant (for example, nickel is used in fairly large
quantities in common stainless steel).
Research and development
* August 2005: Georgia Institute of Technology researchers use triazole to raise
the operating temperature of PEM fuel cells from below 100 °C to over 120 °C,
claiming this will require less carbon-monoxide purification of the hydrogen
fuel.
* 2006:Staxon introduced an inexpensive OEM fuel cell module for system
integration. In 2006 Angstrom Power, a British Columbia based company, began
commercial sales of portable devices using proprietary hydrogen fuel cell
technology, trademarked as "micro hydrogen."
Category: Fuel Cell Technology
Type: Education & Training: Research, Institute, Green Club
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