Modeling the interplay between water capillary transport and species diffusion in gas diffusion layers of proton exchange fuel cells using a hybrid computational fluid dynamics formulation
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
Modeling the interplay between water capillary transport and species diffusion in gas diffusion layers of proton exchange fuel cells using a hybrid computational fluid dynamics formulation
Patrocinador:
Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Agradecimientos:
This work was supported by the projects PID2019-106740RB-I00 and EIN2020-112247 (Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigación) and the project PEM4ENERGY-CM-UC3M funded by the call “Programa de apoyo a la realización de proyectos interdisciplinares de I+D para jóvenes investigadores de la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid 2019–2020, Spain ” under the frame of the “Convenio Plurianual Comunidad de Madrid-Universidad Carlos III de Madrid”. Mr. D. Zapardiel also acknowledges the support of the excellence scholarship from the Comunidad de Madrid.
Proyecto:
Gobierno de España. PID2019-106740RB-I00 Gobierno de España. EIN2020-112247
Palabras clave:
Capillary transport
,
Diffusive transport
,
Gas diffusion layer
,
Hybrid modeling
,
Polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells
Improved modeling of the membrane electrode assembly (MEA) and operation is essential to optimize proton exchange fuel cells (PEFCs). In this work, a hybrid model, which includes a pore network formulation to describe water capillary transport and a continuum Improved modeling of the membrane electrode assembly (MEA) and operation is essential to optimize proton exchange fuel cells (PEFCs). In this work, a hybrid model, which includes a pore network formulation to describe water capillary transport and a continuum formulation to describe gas diffusion, is presented. The model is validated with previous data of carbon-paper gas diffusion layers (GDL), including capillary pressure curve, relative effective diffusivity, , and saturation profile. The model adequately captures the increase of capillary pressure with compression, the nearly cubic dependency of on average saturation, , and the shape of the saturation profile in conditions dominated by capillary fingering (e.g., running PEFC at low temperature). Subsequently, an analysis is presented in terms of the area fraction of water at the inlet and the outlet of the GDL, and , respectively. The results show that gas diffusion is severely hindered when is exceedingly high (¿80%), a situation that can arise due to the bottleneck created by flooded interfacial gaps. Furthermore, it is found that increases with , reducing the GDL effective diffusivity. Overall, the work shows the importance of an appropriate design of MEA porous media and interfaces in PEFCs.[+][-]