Citation:
Garcia Salaberri, Pablo Angel (2022). Effective transport properties. Electrochemical cell calculations with OpenFOAM. Lecture notes in energy, vol. 42. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland AG Pp. 151-168
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España) Comunidad de Madrid Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Sponsor:
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" under the frame of the "Convenio Plurianual Comunidad de Madrid-Universidad Carlos III de Madrid".
Serie/No.:
Lecture notes in energy (LNEN), vol. 42
Project:
Comunidad de Madrid. PEM4ENERGY-CM-UC3M Gobierno de España. PID2019-106740RB-I00 Gobierno de España. EIN2020-112247
Keywords:
Electrochemical energy conversion
,
Storage
,
Transport properties
,
OpenFOAM
Porous media are an integral part of electrochemical energy conversion and storage devices, including fuel cells, electrolyzers, redox flow batteries and lithium-ion batteries, among others. The calculation of effective transport properties is required for desPorous media are an integral part of electrochemical energy conversion and storage devices, including fuel cells, electrolyzers, redox flow batteries and lithium-ion batteries, among others. The calculation of effective transport properties is required for designing more efficient components and for closing the formulation of macroscopic continuum models at the cell/stack level. In this chapter, OpenFOAM is used to determine the effective transport properties of virtually-generated fibrous gas diffusion layers. The analysis focuses on effective properties that rely on the fluid phase, diffusivity and permeability, which are determined by solving Laplace and Navier-Stokes equations at the pore scale, respectively. The model implementation (geometry generation, meshing, solver settings and postprocessing) is described, accompanied by a discussion of the main results. The dependence of orthotropic effective transport properties on porosity is examined and compared with traditional correlations.[+][-]