Using a Stack Shunt to Mitigate Catalyst Support Carbon Corrosion in Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cell Stacks During Start-Stop Cycling

2013 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Denis Bona ◽  
Dennis E. Curtin ◽  
Francesco Pedrazzo ◽  
Elena Maria Tresso

Carbon black based electrodes are generally recognized as state of the art for PEM fuel cell technology due to the high performance achieved with a relatively low Pt content. However, the catalyst carbon support is prone to carbon oxidation. This leads to a loss of the catalyst area and overall performance, along with a higher mass transport loss due to an increased flooding tendency. This phenomenon is particularly severe when the fuel cell experiences repetitive start-stop cycles. Therefore, specific countermeasures against catalyst layer carbon oxidation are required, especially for automotive and backup power applications, where the startup/shutdown rate is considerably high. The authors evaluated a basic design that uses a stack shunt. A properly modified control protocol, which includes the stack shunt, is able to avoid high cathode potential peaks, which are known to accelerate catalyst carbon support corrosion and its negative effects. During two separate durability tests, one adopting the shunt design and another using nonprotected shutdown, a 24-cell stack was subjected to continuous starts and stops for several months and its performance constantly monitored. The results show that when the shunt is used, there is a 37% reduction in the voltage degradation rate for each startup/shutdown cycle and a two-fold increase in the number of startup/shutdown cycles before an individual cell reached the specified “end of life” voltage criteria. Furthermore, ex situ FE-SEM analysis revealed cathode catalyst layer thinning, which is an indication that the emerging degradation mechanism is the catalyst support carbon corrosion, as expected. This provides further support that the constant voltage degradation rate typically experienced in PEMFCs can be primarily attributed to the catalyst support carbon corrosion rate. The proposed shunt protocol is very cost effective and does not require any substantial changes in the system. For this reason, its adoption is recommended as a viable method to decrease the catalyst support carbon corrosion rate and extend the operating life of the PEMFC stack.

Author(s):  
Peter Dobson ◽  
Marc Secanell

The catalyst layer of a polymer electrolyte fuel cell is commonly represented in mathematical models as an agglomerate structure of carbon catalyst-support particles. There are two prevailing assumptions for the structure of the agglomerates. The first is that the pores are filled with perfluorosulfonated-ionomer (PFSI). The second is that the pores are hydrophilic and are flooded only with liquid water during operation. The objective of this work is to develop numerical models for single water-filled and ionomer-filled agglomerates in a cathode catalyst layer of a polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC), and investigate the properties of oxygen transport, proton transport, and reaction kinetics. The two models provide different solutions for the distribution of oxygen and protons, and produce a different reaction profile within the agglomerate. Previous numerical water-filled ionomer models in the literature have neglected the effect of the ionomer thin film. Therefore, the results obtained for both ionomer and water-filled models could not be easily compared. In this article, the equations developed relate the assumed structure of the agglomerates to the structure of the catalyst layer (CL). Results compare the effect of the thin film thickness in the two different types of agglomerates and relate the phenomena occurring within the agglomerates to overall catalyst layer performance.


2012 ◽  
Vol 214 ◽  
pp. 386-398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dusan Spernjak ◽  
Joseph Fairweather ◽  
Rangachary Mukundan ◽  
Tommy Rockward ◽  
Rodney L. Borup

2010 ◽  
Vol 2010 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Sevjidsuren ◽  
S. Zils ◽  
S. Kaserer ◽  
A. Wolz ◽  
F. Ettingshausen ◽  
...  

The performance of a low temperature fuel cell is strongly correlated with parameters like the platinum particle size, platinum dispersion on the carbon support, and electronic and protonic conductivity in the catalyst layer as well as its porosity. These parameters can be controlled by a rational choice of the appropriate catalyst synthesis and carbon support. Only recently, particular attention has been given to the support morphology, as it plays an important role for the formation of the electrode structure. Due to their significantly different structure, mesoporous carbon microbeads (MCMBs) and multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) were used as supports and compared. Pt nanoparticles were decorated on these supports using the polyol method. Their size was varied by different heating times during the synthesis, and XRD, TEM, SEM, CV, and single cell tests used in their detailed characterization. A membrane-electrode assembly prepared with the MCMB did not show any activity in the fuel cell test, although the catalyst's electrochemical activity was almost similar to the MWCNT. This is assumed to be due to the very dense electrode structure formed by this support material, which does not allow for sufficient mass transport.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 24
Author(s):  
Yoshiyuki Hashimasa ◽  
Hiroshi Daitoku ◽  
Tomoaki Numata

We investigated the effects of cell temperature and the humidity of gas supplied to the cell during the load cycle durability test protocol recommended by The Fuel Cell Commercialization Conference of Japan (FCCJ). Changes in the electrochemically active surface area (ECA) and in the amount of carbon support corrosion were examined by using the JARI standard single cell. The ECA declined more quickly when the gas humidity was raised, and the carbon corrosion was at the same level. These results suggest that the agglomeration of platinum was accelerated by the same agglomeration mechanism, i.e., by raising the humidity of the gas supplied to the cell.


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