Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Sustainable Energy Workshop for Science and Technology Teachers (SEWFSTT) Module 2 Fuel Cells and the Hydrogen Economy “This product was funded by a grant awarded under te Workforce Innovation In Regional Economic Development Initiative as implemented by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration. The information contained in this product was created by a grantee and does not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Labor. All references to nongovernmental companies or organizations, their services, products, or resources are offered for information purposes and should not be construed as a endorsement by the Department of Labor. This product is copyrighted by the institution that created it and is intended for individual organization, non-commercial use only.” Fuel Cells Discussion: Prior Exposure with Fuel Cells (outside of the automotive industry) Fuel Cells come in all shapes and sizes 8 6 4 7 3 5 7 2 Basic Definition of a Fuel Cell Electrochemical Energy Conversion Device Different Kinds of Fuel Cells Energy Conversion: PEM Fuel Cell 2H 2 O2 2H 2O energy Hydrogen and oxygen are combined in a non-combustion process Electricity, heat and water are produced Reduction-Oxidation Rxn (redox) Anode Half-Reaction Cathode Half-Reaction Reductant Product e Oxidant e Product 2H 2 4H 4e O2 4H 4e 2H 2O Electric Potential Developed • Redox potential is a measure of a substance’s electronegativity (affinity for electrons) • “Downhill” in Energy Diagram -- Free energy • Don’t have oxidation reaction without reduction reaction present at same time (matched set) • Nernst Equation • Calculation of electric potential in “non-ideal” circumstances Oxidation Half-Reaction Reduction Half-Reaction 2H 2 4H 4e O2 4H 4e 2H 2O E 0 0 VSHE E 0 1.229 VSHE Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell Oxidation reaction facilitated by a catalyst - typically Pt ($$$) (Polymer Electrolyte Membrane) 2H 2 4H 4e Between the reduction and oxidation stages, the electrons are routed through a circuit Hydrogen ions (protons) permeate through the electrolyte membrane Reduction reaction O2 4H 4e 2H 2O 1.23 V Power Produced – Watts/m2 • Activation Loss – potential difference above the equilibrium value required to produce a current (depends on activation energy of the reaction) – energy is lost as heat • Ohmic Loss – voltage drop due to resistance of the cell components and interconnects • Mass Transport Loss – depletion of reactants at catalyst sites under high loads PEM (Polymer Electrolyte Membrane) • Polymers such as polyphenylenes, Nafion are used • Water is a crucial participant in the process •absorption of water increases the proton conductivity •membrane is confined – not free to swell – pushes electrodes PEM (Polymer Electrolyte Membrane) • Thickness of the membrane and catalyst in the PEM can vary … • Example: catalyst layers containing about 0.15 milligrams (mg) Pt/cm2 • thickness of the catalyst layer is close to 10 micrometers •yields a MEA with a total thickness of about 200μm (or 0.2 mm or 20 sheets of paper) •generates more than half an ampere of current per cm2 at a voltage of 0.7 volts Platinum needs to be placed to maximize surface area Needs to be encased in engineered components Design Goals: Limited Overview • Deliver Hydrogen • Deliver Oxygen • Chemical reaction – what can influence rate of reaction • Water Management • Maintain hydration levels • Remove water by-product • Efficient path for electrons to ‘migrate’ to electrodes • Thermal management Parts of a Fuel Cell Bipolar Plates • Serpentine channels for hydrogen and oxygen to flow through device • Acts as a current collector – electrons enter and exit cell through the plate Anode • Conducts electrons away from catalyst to external circuit • Channels to supply H2 evenly to the surface of the catalyst Cathode • Channels to supply O2 evenly to the surface of the catalyst • Conducts electrons back to catalyst for recombining Parts of a PEM Fuel Cell Membrane Electrode Assembly • Anode • Cathode • PEM (Polymer Electrolyte Membrane) • conducts only positively charged ions • blocks electrons and other substances • Catalyst • thin coat of platinum powder applied to carbon paper or cloth •maximizes surface area • Backing Layers • porous carbon cloth conducts electrons away from catalyst to external circuit • allows right amount of water vapor to enter/exit • too much blocks the pores • membrane needs to be humidified Schematic of Fuel Cell Operation 1 H 2 O2 H 2O energy 2 1.2 V = theoretical maximum voltage generated by this reaction Typical output = 0.7V – 0.9V ….. (1 W per cm2) Schematic of Fuel Cell Operation • Anode Hydrogen gas is circulated through ‘serpentine’ channels Hydrogen from channels passes through porous medium (gas diffusion backing) Electron is stripped from Hydrogen as it makes contact with Pt catalyst which is embedded in a carbon nanoparticle Electron conducted away through circuit Hydrogen nucleus (proton) passes through PEM membrane to cathode Activity: PEM Fuel Cell Car (Pairs) • Outline: – Produce hydrogen and oxygen via electrolysis – Use stored H2 and O2 to generate electricity and drive motor Educational Objectives for this Activity: • Recognize H2 and O2 as portable fuels: same role as gasoline in an IC engine • Recognize that a separate process is required to produce hydrogen • Observation of the relationship between the volumes of displaced water in the hydrogen and oxygen tanks (and relationship to redox equations) • Recognize that the hydrogen and oxygen produced came from initial injection of water • Discussion of extension activities Parts Identification • Battery components – Battery pack – 2 AA Batteries – Connection Cable Add batteries to battery pack • Chassis • Fuel Cell – Identify Hydrogen and Oxygen side Incredibly important! • H2 and O2 Storage Tanks Two cylinders + 2 cup-like caps w/ long hoses attached … but wait … there’s more … • Hydration Components – – – – Parts Identification Syringe Two short, narrow tubes with black and red caps Short length of wide tubing 90mL of distilled water + cup Very important - needs to be distilled water (NOT Purified water) ------ Why? If you do not ALSO have a short length of wide tubing, you’re OK – just remove the black plug and use the narrow tube Hydrate Fuel Cell • Fill the syringe with distilled water and (gently) inject a small amount in to the LOWER nozzle on the HYDROGEN side You will see the water fill in the fuel cell – you can go all the way until the water pours out the top nozzle. GENTLY • Remove the syringe and insert the tube with the black cap in the LOWER nozzle Hydrate Fuel Cell • Fill the syringe with distilled water and (gently) inject a small amount in to the LOWER nozzle on the OXYGEN side You will see the water fill in the fuel cell – you can go all the way until the water pours out the top nozzle. GENTLY O2 • Remove the syringe and insert the tube (red cap) in the LOWER nozzle Prepare to Generate Hydrogen and Oxygen • Insert the cup-like caps in to the Hydrogen and Oxygen tanks 0 mL • Align the notch in the cap with the gap in the tank – we want to allow trapped air to escape when we fill the tanks with water • Fill the tanks to the zero (0) mL mark with distilled water – Suggestion: Use the syringe (each will take about 30mL) Prepare to Generate Hydrogen and Oxygen Connect the tank hoses to the upper nozzles on their respective sides (i.e. Hydrogen tank to Hydrogen nozzle) Don’t forget to connect the Oxygen side too! Prepare to Generate Hydrogen and Oxygen Make sure battery pack is turned off Connect battery pack to connector Connect banana plugs to fuel cell (black to black, red to red) Don’t turn it on yet ….. Double -Check Double check connections (Black-to-Black, Red-to-Red) Turn on the battery pack and observe the production of H2 and O2 Disconnect Battery Pack You now have a full ‘gas tank’ and a flow-through battery Need a DC motor and wheels to drive a car Transfer Assembly to Car and Connect Motor • As a unit, transfer the gas tanks and the fuel cell to the car chassis • Connect the banana plugs from the motor to the fuel cell (black-to-black) to begin operation Be careful moving the tanks – a leak at this stage means you are “out of gas”! Reflection • Amount of hydrogen and oxygen produced during electrolysis • Source for all this power – the original fuel? • Moving the gas tanks to the car – Production of H2? Where? Activity: Construct a PEM Fuel Cell • A small, single cell, PEM fuel cell can easily be constructed • Source of hydrogen needed • Chemical reaction • Fuel cell production + storage • Kits: • Helpful hint: accordion Activity Comments • Fuel cells need to be hydrated in order to run properly, if a fuel cell has been sitting un-used for a long time it may need a soaking rest to re-hydrate. Try placing it in a plastic bag with a wet towel for a few hours Educational Objectives – Curricular Connections Discussion: Available Animations Energy Chain for Fuel Cells Are there associated societal issues associated with fuel cells (power generation &/or propulsion?) Something is missing here …. Energy Chain for Fuel Cells ?! Multiple Instructional Levels • Exposure/Exploration • Process understanding • Chemical Reaction – Rate of reaction: dependence on pressure, temperature, etc. • Load Impact on Cell Efficiency • High voltage vs. low voltage applications • Activation energy Activity: Fuel Cell Stack • Exploration of a pressurized fuel cell stack Different From a Battery? Redox (Oxidation-Reduction Reaction) Baghdad Battery – 250 BC Lead-Acid Batteries (2V per cell) • e.g. car batteries, deep-cycle batteries Anode : Pb( s ) SO42 ( aq) PbSO4 ( s ) 2e 2 4 ( aq ) Cathode : PbO2 ( s ) SO 4 H 2e PbSO4 ( s ) 2 H 2O(l ) Energy-to-weight ratio very low Energy-to-volume ratio: low But ….Power-to-Weight ratio: LARGE RECHARGABLE Similarities and Differences Similarities Differences • Chemical potential energy converted in to Electric potential energy • Passage of H2 and O2 thru vs. storage of chemicals in battery • Cellular structure • Redox reactions • Flow battery Cellular Structure of Fuel Cells • Batteries in series • Fuel cells are essentially flow-through batteries • Challenge is getting H2 and O2 uniformly to all of the cells Stationary Power Facility: Stacks 5 kW Fuel Cell System, Manufactured by PlugPower, Installed at a USDOD Facility 5 PC 25TM Fuel Cells sited in Anchorage, Alaska (International Fuel Cells, LLC) 200-kW + 900,000 BTU heat PAFC (Phosphoric Acid Fuel Cells) Parts of a PEM Fuel Cell System • Propulsion System Automotive Application Volkswagen’s HTFC The Hydrogen Economy • Hydrogen as a storage medium for energy Problem: Hydrogen does not occur naturally in nature as H2 The Hydrogen Economy • Infrastructure How does one go about developing a production, delivery and use system for an energy storage medium that is only in its infancy http://www.hydrogen.energy.gov/systems_integration.html Hydrogen Production and Delivery Advantage: Hydrogen is storage medium – Production from a variety of sources Currently: Steam Reforming of Natural Gas • Biological Water Splitting • Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting • Reforming of Biomass and Wastes • Solar Thermal Water Splitting • Renewable Electrolysis Community Adoption – Priming the Pump Hydrogen Storage Hydrogen is not an ‘energy dense’ fuel (need lots to go anywhere) • Pressurized Steel and Composite Tanks • Hydrogen can cause metals to become brittle (not good!) • Metal Hydride • H2 is locked in another chemical • Chemical reaction releases that metal • Micropore Storage • Buckyballs & nanoscale methods Metal Decorated Nanostructures The Hydrogen Safety Movie • It’s not what you may think Discussion: Synthesis of Fuel Cell Challenges for PEM Fuel Cells • Platinum: reduction of amt of material used = reduced cost – Wikipedia: 2002 cost was $1,000 per kW • Water management – Too little --- membrane dries up – Too much --- pores blocked, efficiency drops • Steady Fuel Supply – Controlling amount of incoming gas + pressure • Poisoning of the anode by carbon monoxide • Temperature control This technology is coming out of its infancy …..