Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1289686 Journal of Power Sources 2010 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Air-delivery is typically the largest parasitic loss in PEM fuel cell systems. We develop a passive water management system that minimizes this loss by enabling stable, flood-free performance in parallel channel architectures, at very low air stoichiometries. Our system employs in situ-polymerized wicks which conform to and coat cathode flow field channel walls, thereby spatially defining regions for water and air transport. We first present the fabrication procedure, which incorporates a flow field plate geometry comparable to many state-of-the-art architectures (e.g., stamped metal or injection molded flow fields). We then experimentally compare water management flow field performance versus a control case with no wick integration. At the very low air stoichiometry of 1.15, our system delivers a peak power density of 0.68 W cm−2. This represents a 62% increase in peak power over the control case. The open channel and manifold geometries are identical for both cases, and we demonstrate near identical inlet-to-outlet cathode pressure drops at all fuel cell operating points. Our water management system therefore achieves significant performance enhancement without introducing additional parasitic losses.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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