Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1288994 Journal of Power Sources 2010 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper reports about an experimental and numerical study of the internal currents that occur during fuel cell start-up under open-circuit conditions. The internal currents were measured in a segmented cell specifically designed for this purpose and it was found that they could reach values higher than 1 A cm−2. They result from the potential that appears at the inlet of the anode compartment while hydrogen pushes oxygen, air, or possibly nitrogen that was introduced for purging water toward the outlet. For a short time, a fraction of the channels is filled with hydrogen while the other part is still occupied by the gas initially present. The model presented in the paper demonstrates that the occurrence of internal currents can be explained mostly by capacitive effects. Carbon oxidation occurs probably simultaneously but its contribution to the internal currents is by all appearances negligible. The model also explains the transient voltage rise (over the steady state open circuit voltage) that is sometimes observed experimentally shortly after the fuel cell start-up.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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