Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1271964 International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2011 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

Thermal management is one of the key factors required to ensure good performance polymer electrolyte fuel cell (PEFC) stacks. The choice of the thermal management strategy depends on the specific application, size, weight, design, complexity, and cost. In this work, we investigate various alternative thermal management strategies for PEFC stacks, e.g., forced convection in specially design cooling plate/channel with either (i) liquid or (ii) air as the coolant; (iii) edge-air cooling with fins and; combine oxidant and coolant flow (open-cathode) with (iv) forced and (v) natural convection air cooling. A three-dimensional two-phase model, comprising of the equations of conservation of mass, momentum, species, energy and charge, is employed to quantify the performance of various cooling strategies. The results demonstrate that thermal management is essential to ensure good stack performance. Liquid cooling, as expected, performs the best compared to air cooling, whereas natural convection cooling is just marginally able to maintain a stack with large number of cells from steep drop in performance. Finally, results presented in this paper can provide useful design guidelines for selection of a suitable thermal management strategy for a PEFC stack and its near-to- or optimum cooling condition.

► We develop a comprehensive mechanistic PEFC model for stack with several cooling strategies. ► The effects of cooling conditions are evaluated with regard to the stack performance. ► The cooling strategies are compared in terms of performance, size, weight and complexity. ► Liquid-cooled stack yields the best performance; but it requires complex auxiliaries.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
Authors
, , ,