Effect of Porosity Gradient in Gas Diffusion Layer on Cell Performance With Thin-Film Agglomerate Model in Cathode Catalyst Layer of a PEM Fuel Cell

Author(s):  
Chun-I Lee ◽  
Shiqah-Ping Jung ◽  
Kan-Lin Hsueh ◽  
Chi-Chang Chen ◽  
Wen-Chen Chang

A one-dimensional, steady-state, two-phase, isothermal numerical simulations were performed to investigate the effect on cell performance of a PEM fuel cell under non-uniform porosity of gas diffusion layer. In the simulation, the non-uniform porosity of gas diffusion layer was taken into account to analyze the transport phenomena of water flooding and mass transport in the gas diffusion layer. The porosity of the gas diffusion layer is treated as a linear function. Furthermore, the structure of the catalyst layer is considered to be a cylindrical thin-film agglomerate. Regarding the distribution analysis of liquid water saturation, oxygen concentration and water concentration depend on the porosity of gas diffusion layer. In the simulation, the εCG and εGC represent the porosity of the interfaces between the channel and gas diffusion layer and the gas diffusion layer and the catalyst layer, respectively. The simulation results indicate that when the (εCG, εGC) = (0.8, 0.4), higher liquid water saturation appears in the gas diffusion layer and the catalyst layer. On the contrary, when the (εCG, εGC) = (0.4, 0.4), lower liquid water saturation appears. Once the liquid water produced by the electrochemical reaction and condensate of vapor water may accumulate in the open pores of the gas diffusion layer and reduced the oxygen transport to the catalyst sites. This research attempts to use a thin-film agglomerate model, which analyze the significant transport phenomena of water flooding and mass transport under linear porosity gradient of gas diffusion layer in the cathode of a PEM fuel cell.

Author(s):  
J. Hinebaugh ◽  
A. Bazylak

An unstructured, three-dimensional pore network model is employed to describe the effect of through-plane porosity profiles on liquid water saturation within the gas diffusion layer (GDL) of the polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell. Random fibre placements are based on the porosity profiles of six commercially available GDL materials recently obtained through x-ray computed tomography experiments. The pore space is characterized with a maximal ball algorithm, and invasion percolation-based simulations are performed. It is shown that water tends to accumulate in regions of relatively high porosity due to the lower associated capillary pressures. It is predicted that GDLs tailored to have smooth porosity profiles will have fewer pockets of high saturation levels within the bulk of the material. The results provide a more detailed picture of the possible water distributions in GDLs during operation.


Author(s):  
Andrei Kulikovsky

Abstract An analytical model for impedance of oxygen transport in the gas--diffusion layer (GDL) and cathode channel of a PEM fuel cell was developed. The model is based on transient oxygen mass conservation equations coupled to the proton current conservation equation in the catalyst layer. An analytical formula for the ``GDL+channel'' impedance was derived assuming that the oxygen and proton transport in the cathode catalyst layer (CCL) are fast. In the Nyquist plot, the resulting impedance consisted of two arcs describing oxygen transport in the air channel (low--frequency arc) and in the GDL. The characteristic frequency of GDL arc depends on the CCL thickness: large CCL thickness strongly lowers this frequency. At small CCL thickness, the high--frequency feature on the arc shape forms. This effect is important for identification of peaks in distribution of relaxation times spectra of low--Pt PEMFCs.


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