scholarly journals Direct numerical calculation of the kinematic tortuosity of reactive mixture flow in the anode layer of solid oxide fuel cells by the lattice Boltzmann method

2007 ◽  
Vol 170 (2) ◽  
pp. 359-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pietro Asinari ◽  
Michele Calì Quaglia ◽  
Michael R. von Spakovsky ◽  
Bhavani V. Kasula
Author(s):  
Abhijit S. Joshi ◽  
Kyle N. Grew ◽  
Aldo A. Peracchio ◽  
Wilson K. S. Chiu

At the length scales and temperatures present in a typical SOFC, both continuum and non-continuum transport of fuel and product species are important. Fuel and product transport through a representative, microscopic, two-dimensional (2D) channel present in the porous anode of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) is examined. Non-continuum transport, which can be broken down into the slip, transition and free molecular regimes, is modeled for a ternary system (H2, H2O, and N2) using the Stefan-Maxwell (SM) model, the Dusty-Gas (DG) model and the lattice Boltzmann method (LBM). Results obtained show that the LBM can provide a suitable framework for continuum as well as non-continuum transport in a SOFC up to the transition regime. LBM can also handle complex porous geometries, which are currently intractable by other modeling approaches, e.g. SM and DG. However, further work is required to extend the range of application of the present LBM to the free-molecular flow regime.


Author(s):  
Pietro Asinari ◽  
Michele Cali` Quaglia ◽  
Michael R. von Spakovsky ◽  
Bhavani V. Kasula

Mathematical models that predict performance can aid in the understanding and development of solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs). Of course, various modeling approaches exist involving different length scales. In particular, very significant advances are now taking place using microscopic models to understand the complex composite structures of electrodes and three-phase boundaries. Ultimately these advances should lead to predictions of cell behavior, which at present are measured empirically and inserted into macroscopic cell models. In order to achieve this ambitious goal, simulation tools based on these macroscopic models must be redesigned by matching them to the complex microscopic phenomena, which take place at the pore scale level. As a matter of fact, the macroscopic continuum approach essentially consists of applying some type of homogenization technique, which properly averages the underlying microscopic phenomena for producing measurable quantities. Unfortunately, these quantities in the porous electrodes of fuel cells are sometimes measurable only in principle. For this reason, this type of approach introduces additional uncertainties into the macroscopic models, which can significantly affect the numerical results, particularly their generality. This paper is part of an ongoing effort to address the problem by following an alternative approach. The key idea is to numerically simulate the underlying microscopic phenomena in an effort to bring the mathematical description nearer to actual reality. In particular, some recently developed mesoscopic tools appear to be very promising since the microscopic approach is, in this particular case, partially included in the numerical method itself. In particular, the models based on the lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) treat the problem by reproducing the collisions among particles of the same type, among particles belonging to different species, and finally among the species and the solid obstructions. Recently, a model developed by the authors was proposed which, based on LBM, models the fluid flow of reactive mixtures in randomly generated porous media by simulating the actual coupling interaction among the species. A parallel three–dimensional numerical code was developed in order to implement this model and to simulate the actual microscopic structures of SOFC porous electrodes. In this paper, a thin anode (50 micron) of Ni-metal / YSZ-electrolyte cermet for a high–temperature electrolyte supported SOFC was considered in the numerical simulations. The three–dimensional anode structure was derived by a regression analysis based on the granulometry law applied to some microscopic pictures obtained with an electron microscope. The numerical simulations show the spatial distribution of the mass fluxes for the reactants and the products of the electrochemical reactions. The described technique will allow one to design new improved materials and structures in order to statistically optimize these fluid paths.


2014 ◽  
Vol 25 (04) ◽  
pp. 1450004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruofan Qiu ◽  
Anlin Wang ◽  
Qiwei Gong ◽  
Tao Jiang

In this paper, two-phase fluid mixture flow in rectangular two-inlet cavity is studied using lattice Boltzmann method (LBM). To simulate two-phase fluids with large viscosity difference, the pseudo-potential model is improved. The improved model is verified for surface tension through Laplace's law and shown much better performance in simulating fluids with large viscosity difference than pseudo-potential model. The multiple-relaxation-time (MRT) scheme is used to enhance numerical stability. Then the two-phase fluid mixture flow with same and different viscosity in two-inlet cavity is simulated by present lattice Boltzmann (LB) model, pseudo-potential LB model and volume-of-fluid (VOF) method, respectively. The comparison of these numerical results shows that LB model is more suitable for such kind of flow than VOF method, since it can reflect repulsive forces and transitional region of two-phase fluids in dynamic process. Moreover, it also shows that present LB model has better dynamic stability than pseudo-potential model. Furthermore, simulations of the two-phase fluid mixture flow with different fluid viscosities, inlet velocities, inlet heights and outlet positions using present LB model are presented, exhibiting their effect to contact area of fluids.


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