4.8 Article

Whole life cycle performance degradation test and RUL prediction research of fuel cell MEA

Journal

APPLIED ENERGY
Volume 310, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2022.118556

Keywords

PEMFC; Performance degradation; Remaining useful life; Mechanism model; Particle filtering

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22179103, 21676207]
  2. Foshan Xianhu Laboratory Open-end Fund key project [XHD2020-002]

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Understanding the degradation mechanism and accurately predicting the remaining useful life of proton exchange membrane fuel cells is crucial for improving durability and reducing operation costs. Through a study on the lifetime of a fuel cell, it was found that catalyst degradation was the main factor contributing to voltage degradation, with membrane degradation and increase in MEA mass transfer resistance playing increasingly significant roles in the latter stage of the lifetime. The influence of evolutions to the internal resistance was determined to be negligible.
Understanding the degradation mechanism and accurate prediction of the remaining useful life (RUL) of proton exchange membrane fuel cells (FCs) can provide guidance for improving durability and reducing their operation and maintenance costs. In this paper, we measured the actual lifetime of an FC for more than 7000 h until the end of its life and developed an RUL model based on the degradation mechanism. The particle filter (PF) algorithm was used to eliminate the influence of random errors on the key model parameters and on the prediction of RUL. RUL prediction was carried out and the contributions of key factors to FC voltage degradation were calculated and analyzed. The results demonstrated that the RUL of the FC could be accurately predicted with the RUL model and the PF algorithm. Over the lifetime of the FC, catalyst degradation was responsible for the majority of FC voltage degradation, contributing as much as 84. 3% of the performance degradation. In the latter stage of the FC lifetime, the rapid increase in leakage current caused by membrane degradation and the increase in MEA mass transfer resistance became increasingly significant, with their voltage degradation contribution rates increasing from 0.12% to 35.19% and from-4.04% to 14.32%, respectively. The influence of evolutions to the internal resistance on FC performance degradation was determined to be negligible.

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