Fuel Cells
Fuel Cells
Fuel Cells
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What is a Fuel CELL?
• Basically fuel cell in common language, is a device which converts
chemical energy from a fuel into electrical energy .
• It happens by undergoing a chemical reaction where positively charged
hydrogen ions reacts with oxygen or any other oxidizing agent.
• The fuel cell consists of two electrodes where the reaction takes
place,one is positively charged called anode and the negatively
charged called cathode.
• Every fuel cell comprises of an electrolyte and a catalyst to fasten the
reaction rate and to mobilise the ions to one electrode to the other.
• A single fuel cell generates a tiny amount of direct current (DC)
electricity.
• Many fuel cells are usually assembled into a stack. Cell or stack, the
principles are the same.
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Why use a fuel cell?
• Pollution free.
• Pure hydrogen is used as a fuel and the only by products
are water and heat
• Does work of both a combustion engine (chemical energy
to electrical energy to mechanical energy ) and a battery
(chemical to electrical) but with more efficiency and
longer life span.
• Longer life span as no moving parts, therefore no wear
and tear
• Efficiency can be increased if fuel cell incorporates
thermal cogeneration (harnessing thermal output to run
turbines.
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Therefore additional electricity produced ) 3
Working of a Fuel Cell
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BLOCK
DIAGRAM
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GENERALIZED
CHEMICAL
REACTION
Anode side (an oxidation reaction):
2H2 => 4H++ 4e-
Cathode side (a reduction reaction):
O2 + 4H+ + 4e- => 2H2O
Net reaction (the "redox" reaction):
2H2 + O2 => 2H2O
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TYPES OF FUEL
CELL
On the basis of the electrolyte used the fuels cell can be classified as
follows:-
1. Alkaline Fuel Cell-alkaline solution electrolyte such as KOH.
2. Phosphoric Acid Fuel Cells(PAFC)-electrolyte is phosphoric acid.
3. Solid Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell-electrolyte is
polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells and their electrolyte
consist of the proton exchange membrane.
4. Molten Carbonate Fuel Cells-electrolyte as molten carbonate.
5. Solid Oxide Fuel Cells(SOFC)-electrolyte is ceramic ion
conducting electrolyte in solid oxide form.
6. Regenerative Fuel Cell
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ALKALINE FUEL
CELL
• This is one of the oldest designs for fuel cells; the United States
space program has used them since the 1960s.
• The AFC is very susceptible to contamination, so it requires pure
hydrogen and oxygen. It is also very expensive, so this type of fuel
cell is unlikely to be commercialized.
• They are among the most efficient fuel cells, having the potential to
reach 70%.
• The electrolyte used is aqueous potassium hydroxide(KOH). The
electrolyte acts as a medium for conduction of ions in between the
electrodes.
• Porous (and catalyzed) graphite electrodes
• Semi-permeable, Teflon coated carbon material
• Heavily catalyzed
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WORKING
The chemistry behind the AFC is:-
The fuel cell produces power through a redox reaction between hydrogen and
oxygen.
At the anode, hydrogen is oxidized according to the reaction:
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PHOSPHORIC
ACID FUEL
CELL(PAFC)
•The phosphoric-acid fuel cell has potential for use in small stationary
power-generation systems.
•It operates at a higher temperature than polymer exchange membrane
fuel cells, so it has a longer warm-up time.
• This makes it unsuitable for use in cars.
• Electrodes: porous carbon containing Pt or its alloys as catalysts.
• Electrolyte: liquid phosphoric acid in Teflon-bonded silicon carbide
matrix.
• Operating range is about 150 to 210 °C.
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WORKING
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DIAGRAM
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APPLICATI
ONS
• PAFC have been used for stationary power generators with output
in the 100 kW to 400 kW range and they are also finding
application in large vehicles such as buses.
• India's DRDO is developing PAFC for air independent propulsion
in their Scorpène class submarines, and the Indian Navy have
requested a fully engineered system in 2014.
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Solid Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell
• High power density
• Relatively low operating temperature (ranging from 60 to 80 degrees
Celsius, or 140 to 176 degrees Fahrenheit).
• The low operating temperature means that it doesn't take very long
for the fuel cell to warm up and begin generating electricity.
• PEMFCs are built out of membrane electrode assemblies (MEA)
which include the electrodes, electrolyte, catalyst, and gas diffusion
layers
• . An ink of catalyst, carbon, and electrode are sprayed or painted
onto the solid electrolyte and carbon paper is hot pressed on either
side to protect the inside of the cell and also act as electrodes.
• The pivotal part of the cell is the triple phase boundary (TPB) where
the electrolyte, catalyst, and reactants mix and thus where the cell
reactions actually occur. Importantly, the membrane must not be
electrically conductive so the half reactions do not mix.
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WORKING
• To function, the membrane must conduct hydrogen ions (protons)
but not electrons as this would in effect "short circuit" the fuel cell.
• The membrane must also not allow either gas to pass to the other
side of the cell, a problem known as gas crossover. Finally, the
membrane must be resistant to the reducing environment at the
cathode as well as the harsh oxidative environment at the anode.
• Splitting of the hydrogen molecule is relatively easy by using a
platinum catalyst. Unfortunately however, splitting the oxygen
molecule is more difficult, and this causes significant electric
losses.
• An appropriate catalyst material for this process has not been
discovered, and platinum is the best option.
• A cheaper alternative to platinum is Cerium(IV) oxide
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DIAGRAM
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APPLICATI
ONS
• Due to their light weight, PEMFCs are most suited for transportation applications.
PEMFCs for busses, which use compressed hydrogen for fuel, can operate at up to 40%
efficiency.
• Generally PEMFCs are implemented on busses over smaller cars because of the available
volume to house the system and store the fuel.
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Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell
These fuel cells are also best suited for large stationary power
generators.
They operate at 600 degrees Celsius, so they can generate steam that
can be used to generate more power.
They have a lower operating temperature than solid oxide fuel cells,
which means they don't need such exotic materials.
This makes the design a little less expensive.
An electrolyte composed of a molten carbonate salt mixture
suspended in a porous, chemically inert ceramic matrix of beta-
alumina solid electrolyte (BASE).
The anode is made from Ni while the cathode is made from nickel
oxide.
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WORKING
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DIAGRAM
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APPLICATI
ONS
• Application of Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (MCFC) has been
developed by the European-funded MC WAP research project to
be eventually used as an alternative power supply for ships.
• This will be cleaner and avoid the pollution of the marine diesel
engines which currently provide the power in the vast majority of
the world’s ships
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SOLID OXIDE FUEL
CELLS
These fuel cells are best suited for large-scale stationary power generators that
could provide electricity for factories or towns.
This type of fuel cell operates at very high temperatures (between 700 and 1,000
degrees Celsius).
This high temperature makes reliability a problem, because parts of the fuel cell
can break down after cycling on and off repeatedly.
However, solid oxide fuel cells are very stable when in continuous use.
In fact, the SOFC has demonstrated the longest operating life of any fuel cell
under certain operating conditions.
The high temperature also has an advantage: the steam produced by the fuel cell
can be channeled into turbines to generate more electricity.
This process is called co-generation of heat and power (CHP) and it improves the
overall efficiency of the system
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• The ceramic anode layer must be very porous to allow the fuel to flow
towards the electrolyte.
• The most common material used is a cermet made up of nickel mixed
with the ceramic material that is used for the electrolyte in that
particular cell, typically YSZ (yttria stabilized zirconia) nanomaterial-
based catalysts, this YSZ part helps stop the grain growth of nickel.
• The electrolyte is a dense layer of ceramic that conducts oxygen ions.
Its electronic conductivity must be kept as low
as possible to prevent losses from leakage currents.
• Popular electrolyte materials include
yttria-stabilized zirconia
(YSZ) (often the 8% form Y8SZ),
scandia stabilized zirconia (ScSZ)
(usually 9 mol%Sc2O3 – 9ScSZ)
and gadolinium doped ceria (GDC).
• Lanthanum strontium manganite (LSM) is the cathode material of
choice for commercial use because of its compatibility with doped
zirconia
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FORMATION OF CERAMIC LAYER
• The ceramic layer used for the SOFC is prepared by a method called
thin film deposition or slurry or suspension deposition.
• Thin Film Deposition is the technology of applying a very thin film
of material – between a few nanometers to about 100 micrometers,
or the thickness of a few atoms – onto a “substrate” surface to be
coated, or onto a previously deposited coating to form layers.
• Thin Film Deposition manufacturing processes are at the heart of
today’s semiconductor industry, solar panels, CDs, disk drives, and
optical devices industries.
• Thin Film Deposition is usually divided into two broad categories –
Chemical Deposition and Physical Deposition.
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CHEMICAL
DEPOSITION
• Chemical Deposition is when a volatile fluid precursor produces a chemical change on
a surface leaving a chemically deposited coating.
• One example is Chemical Vapor Deposition or CVD used to produce the highest-
purity, highest-performance solid materials in the semiconductor industry today.
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PHYSICAL DEPOSITION
• Physical Deposition refers to a wide range of technologies where a
material is released from a source and deposited on a substrate
using mechanical, electromechanical or thermodynamic processes.
• The two most common techniques of Physical Vapor Deposition
or PVD are Evaporation and Sputtering.
• Thermal Evaporation involves heating a solid material that will be
used to coat a substrate inside a high vacuum chamber until it
starts to boil and evaporates producing vapor pressure.
• Inside the vacuum chamber, even a relatively low vapor pressure
is sufficient to raise a vapor cloud. This evaporated material now
constitutes a vapor stream which the vacuum allows to travel
without reacting or scattering against other atoms.
• It traverses the chamber and hits the substrate, sticking to it as a
coating or thin film.
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• Sputtering involves the bombardment of a target
material with high energy particles that are to be
deposited on a substrate like a silicon wafer or solar
panel. \
• The substrates to be coated are placed in a vacuum
chamber containing an inert gas – usually Argon –
and a negative electric charge is placed on the target
material to be deposited causing the plasma in the
chamber to glow.
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• Certain processing technique such as thin film deposition
can help solve this problem with existing material by:
• – reducing the traveling distance of oxygen ions and
electrolyte resistance as resistance is inversely
proportional to conductor length;
• – producing grain structures that are less resistive such as
columnar grain structure;
• – controlling the micro-structural nano-crystalline fine
grains to achieve "fine-tuning" of electrical properties;
• – building composite with large interfacial areas as
interfaces have shown to have extraordinary electrical
properties.
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APPLICATIONS
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REGENERATIVE
FUEL CELL
• If a fuel cell is a device that takes a chemical fuel and consumes it
to produce electricity and a waste product, an RFC can be thought
of as a device that takes that waste product and electricity to return
the original chemical fuel
• . Indeed any fuel cell chemistry can be run in reverse, as is the
nature of oxidation reduction reactions.
• When you run a fuel cell in reverse, the anode becomes the
cathode and the cathode becomes the anode. The mechanics of an
electrolyser are best understood using the hydrogen fuel cell as an
example.
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• In a hydrogen fuel cell, the goal is to consume hydrogen and oxygen to generate
water and an electric current that can be used to perform work.
• The oxidation reaction occurs at the anode, breaking down hydrogen H2 gas into
positive hydrogen ions and negative electrons.
• The reduction reaction occurs at the cathode combining hydrogen and oxygen and
electrons into water.
• An external wire between the anode and the cathode completes the circuit, allowing
electrons to flow from the anode to the cathode. This current can be used to supply
useful work.
• By contrast, supplying a current and reversing the polarities of the electrodes in the
hydrogen fuel cell results in a regenerative hydrogen fuel cell.
• The electrode that was once the cathode is now the anode, it oxidizes water
decomposing it into oxygen gas O2, hydrogen ions and electrons.
• The electrode that was once the anode is now the cathode, it reduces hydrogen and
electrons into hydrogen gas.
• The external current will have to be supplied from a power source, like a solar cell.
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CELL VOLTAGE
H2 + ½O2 → H2O
• Conversion of hydrogen and oxygen to water is
thermodynamically favorable as Gibbs free energy of products
is less than that of reactants.
• Using the equation ΔG° = -nFE°, cell potential of fuel is found
to be 1.18V, considering water in liquid phase, and 1.229V
considering gaseous phase.
• Cell voltage is also calculated using Nernst Equation.
E = E° + RT/nF ln[oxidised]/[reduced]
• The cell voltage changes with temperature as Gibbs free
energy also changes.
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EFFICIENCY OF A FUEL CELL
H2 0.5O2 H2O Change
• For a battery or fuel cell, the maximum work done or work output, is
equal to the Gibbs free energy.
• η = useful output energy = ΔG = 0.83, where ΔG = ΔH - TΔS = -
285.83 + 48.7 = -237.13kJ
ΔH ΔH
• The maximum efficiency of a fuel cell can be 83%
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EFFICIENCY OF FUEL
CELL
• Though maximum efficiency is 83% for a fuel cell, the efficiency
of an actual fuel cell is much lesser.
• This can be attributes to three types of losses-
• Activation polarization – Energy lost in overcoming the
activation energy of reaction due to some defects in catalyst.
• Ohmic polarization – Energy loss due to resistance of the
electrolyte.
• Gas concentration / mass transfer polarization – Energy loss
due to inability of reactants to reach the catalyst quickly or
efficiently
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EFFICIENCY OF FUEL
CELL
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APPLICATIONS
• Solar planes, spacecraft, military UAVs, and cars are just some
examples of potential applications of RFC's.
• The NASA All Terrain Hex Limbed Extra Terrestrial Explorer
(ATHLETE) is a six legged concept rover designed to be able to
navigate the surface of an asteroid and perform routine analysis and
experiments.
• To test the feasibility of using fuel
cells for RAPS, the ATHLETE was
outfitted with an PEMFC system
that could recharge its batteries
while the rover was standing still to
perform diagnostics, and supply
support power during locomotion.
• When the rover needs to recharge, it returns to a hydrogen fueling
station that converts solar energy into hydrogen via a regenerative
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fuel cell.
Hydrogen Cars
• One potential application for the URFC is to incorporate it
into a hydrogen vehicle. Normally a hydrogen fuel cell car
would have to refuel at a hydrogen fueling station.
• The disadvantage here would
be providing the
infrastructure for hydrogen to
be transported to fueling stations.
• A URFC could be incorporated
into an electric vehicle and
serve as a battery. The car could
recharge the URFC by plugging
into the electrical power grid
at a charging station or personal garage.
• A highly efficient URFC vehicle would probably still need
to be refueled at a hydrogen fueling station periodically, but
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not as often as a conventional fuel cell car or gas powered40
vehicle.
TOYOTA MIRAI
• The Toyota Mirai is a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, one of the first
hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles to be sold commercially.
• The Mirai is based on the Toyota FCV (Fuel Cell Vehicle) concept
car.
• The unveiled FCV concept was a bright blue sedan shaped like a
drop of water "to emphasize that water is the only substance that
hydrogen-powered cars emit from their tailpipes.“
• The FCV has a large grille and other openings to allow cooling air
and oxygen intake for use by the fuel cell.
• Retail sales in the U.S.
began in August 2015
at a price of US$57,500.
• More about it in phase 2……
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DISADVANTAGE OF
FUEL CELL
• There is no hydrogen infrastructure to supply coast-to-coast
delivery of hydrogen fuel.
• Technologies are being developed to provide alternative fuel
storage and delivery methods. SOFCs, MCFCs and PAFCs can
internally reform natural gas, providing the perfect solution for
industrial use but MCFCs and PAFCs are too large for home and
transportation use and SOFCs still have years in development.
• PEMs and AFCs can use fuel reformers to convert hydrocarbons,
such as gasoline and natural gas, into hydrogen, but this technology
can lower the overall efficiency of the fuel cell by 1/4 and can
release small amounts of pollutants
• . Onboard fuel storage and conversion solutions are being
developed but they are still years from being perfected.
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RESEARCH ON HOW TO MAKE FUEL
CELLS MORE EFFICIENT
• Renewable energy sources or Co-Ni-Fe catalyst
must give hydrogen.
• Ceramic oxide as fuel cell catalyst (reduces
temperature)
• 2 way traffic pattern
• For oxidation look at sysems used for aerobic
oxidation of organic molecules
• Cheaper catalysts like Prussian blue, Ni-Fe or
graphene instead of platinum
Temperature
• Low temperature required but with high
efficiency.
• Start with high temperature then lower it by
recycling exothermic energy
• Low temperature expands choice of materials
• Oxygen- bottleneck
• Bumpy membrane like sandpaper
• Coat membrane with catalyst to usher in ions
Research on catalyst material
• Atomic scale snapshots using synchrotron
• Visuals of ions flowing through catalytic material.
• Fabrication of better materials can be done
• Route taken within catalyst known
• Observation- more the defects (like missing
oxygen atoms), better.
• More vacancies more reactivity, transport and
power
Nano scale
• Atomic layer deposition and nanopattering to
engineer desired properties in electrolytes and
electrodes.
• Carbon nanotubes (multi walled) with defects
and impurities on outside will replace Pt catalysts
• Clinging outer reaction site and inner has
electrical properties
• Fe-Ni (atomic scale imaging and spectroscopy)
• All this possible as graphene is 1 atom thick
• As good as Pt.
SOLAR FUEL CELLS
• Photo catalysis
• Artificial photosynthesis using photosensitive elctrode.
• Electrodes - GaP - gallium phosphide nanotubes -
500nm long and 90 nm thick.
• Aqueous solution.
• An attractive visible-light absorber that can generate
hydrogen photocatalytically is synthesized by
condensation of cyanamide, dicyandiamide, or
melamine
• Protons in water are reduced photocatalytically.
HYDRAZINE FUEL CELL
• Methanol - direct and indirect usage.
• Gives lower voltage though.
• Theoretical voltage- 1.56 volts. But decomposes.
• Carbon monoxide gives high voltage but poisons catalyst.
• Most membranes transport protons, acidic, thus need high quality
corrosion resistant membrane - platinum.
• But if hydroxyl ions transported instead, no need of corrosion
resistance
• Hydrazine spontaneously explodes upon contact with calcium
oxide, barium oxide, iron oxides, copper oxide, chromate salts, and
many others.
• Special coatings applied to counteract like nitrates, permanganates.
Continued
• Less reactive hydrogen hydrate - 64% solution of
hydrazine.
• Stored in tank filled with granulised polymer
embedded with carbonyl group.
• Reacts to form hydrazone relatively safer.
• Adding warm water produced hydrazine hydrate
• Produces a cell voltage of 1.56V compared to that of
1.23V of hydrogen
• The electrochemical properties of hydrazine in
alkaline solutions have been studied over the last
three decades.
•
Continued
• Electro-oxidation of hydrazine (and hydrazine
derivatives) with the nickel and cobalt showed the
highest catalytic activity.
• However, in that study, copper was found not to be a
good catalyst.
• Nickel boride Ni2B also an active catalyst.
• Silver catalyst used for oxygen.
• Reaction NH2-NH2 + 4OH- -> N2 + 4H2O + 4e-
• O2 + 4e- + 2H2O -> 4OH-
• Electrolyte - different concentrations of KOH solution
DAIHATSU fuel cell development
• FC ShoCase, designed specifically to show-off the
possibilities of the fuel-cell power plant.
• Since conventional fuel cells (proton-exchange type) use
strongly acidic electrolyte membranes, platinum, which
possesses excellent corrosion resistance, is the only
material that can be used as the electrode catalyst.
• By reversing this conventional model and utilizing an
alkaline anion exchange fuel cell Daihatsu succeeded in
eliminating platinum from the electrode catalyst,
replacing it with an inexpensive metal (cobalt, nickel,
etc.), which could not be used before due to low
corrosion resistance.
Continued
• By using hydrazine hydrate, which consists of only
hydrogen and nitrogen, as the fuel
• and developing new materials for the electrode
catalyst
• Daihatsu achieved both an output density of 0.50
W/cm2, which is comparable to the output of a
hydrogen fuel cell, and zero emissions, with water and
nitrogen being the only substances emitted.
• Hydrazine hydrate is a liquid fuel, easy to handle during
filling and its energy density is high.
• Furthermore, as an environmentally friendly synthetic
fuel, hydrazine hydrate results in no CO2 emissions at
all.
Continued
• At the same time, high-concentration hydrazine hydrate is
designated as a poisonous substance (over 30%
concentration) and it must be handled under the same
safety standards applicable to gasoline and most industrial
chemicals.
• With the objective of ensuring safe use, Daihatsu
developed a technology that fixes the hydrazine hydrate
inside the fuel tank through the use of a polymer,
minimizing the adverse effects that any dispersed fuel
could have on humans or the environment should the fuel
tank be damaged during a collision, for example, but that
makes the required amount of liquid hydrazine hydrate
available in a timely manner for electricity generation in the
fuel cell.
THANKYOU