4.7 Article

Water distribution and carbon corrosion under high current density in a proton exchange membrane fuel cell

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENERGY RESEARCH
Volume 46, Issue 3, Pages 3044-3056

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/er.7361

Keywords

carbon corrosion; PEMFC; water distribution; water flooding

Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2019kfyRCPY09]
  2. Wuhan Applied Foundational Frontier Project [2020010601012205]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province [2020CFA040]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51776144]
  5. National Key Research and Development Program of China

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The study highlights the importance of carbon corrosion in the catalyst of PEMFCs and how water distribution directly influences it. By investigating the distribution of water and carbon corrosion under different working conditions, the catalyst is divided into varying levels of flooded areas, with the degree of carbon corrosion in the flooded area reaching as high as 97.76% after 100 hours. Increasing temperature increases the corrosion rate, but helps alleviate water flooding.
Carbon corrosion in the catalyst is an important factor limiting the lifetime of proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs). The water distribution inside the PEMFC directly determines the carbon support's corrosion rate in the catalyst. This study first investigates the water mole fraction distribution in the catalyst under different operating conditions, such as relative humidity (RH), temperature, pressure. It then divides the catalyst into different flooded areas according to the relationship between the water vapor partial pressure and saturated vapor pressure. Finally, it investigates the carbon corrosion characteristic of each region. The carbon corrosion of the catalyst is mainly divided into the corrosion in the non-flooded area and the corrosion in the flooded area. The results show that the decay rate of carbon support is around 4% after 5000 hours of operation in the non-flooding area. However, the degradation of the carbon support in the flooded area after 100 hours is as high as around 97.76%. Therefore, how to avoid flooding is the important issue that needs to be considered in the PEMFC. Moreover, increasing the pressure and RH promote the carbon corrosion in both cases, while increasing the temperature increases the carbon corrosion reaction rate, but it is beneficial to alleviate water flooding. Highlights Water distribution and carbon corrosion under different working conditions. Divide the catalyst into varying levels of flooded areas. The carbon corrosion degree in the flooded area is as high as 97.76% after 100 hours. Increasing temperature increases the corrosion rate, but alleviates water flooding.

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