3.8 Article

Effect of Carbon Dioxide in Fuel on the Performance of PEMFC

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN ELECTROCHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages 42-46

Publisher

KOREAN ELECTROCHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.5229/JKES.2008.11.1.042

Keywords

PEM Fuel cell; Carbon dioxide; Contamination; Impedance; Fuel impurity

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Even though fuel cell have high efficiency when pure hydrogen from gas tank is used as a fuel source, it is more beneficial to generate hydrogen from city gas(mainly methane) in residential application such as domestic or office environments. Thus hydrogen is generated by reforming process using hydrocarbon. Unfortunately, the reforming process for hydrogen production is accompanied with unavoidable impurities. Impurities such as CO, CO2, H2S, NH3, and CH4 in hydrogen could cause negative effects on fuel cell performance. Those effects are kinetic losses due to poisoning of the electrode catalysts, ohmic losses due to proton conductivity reduction including membrane and catalyst ionomer layers, and mass transport losses due to degrading catalyst layer structure and hydrophobic property. Hydrogen produced from reformer eventually contains around 73% of H-2, 20% or less of CO2, 5.8% of less of N-2, or 2% less of CH4, and 10ppm or less of CO. This study is aimed at investigating the effect of carbon dioxide on fuel cell performance. The performance of PEM fuel cell was investigated using current vs. potential experiment, long run(10 hr) test, and electrochemical impedance measurement when the concentrations of carbon dioxide were 10%, 20% and 30%. Also, the concentration of impurity supplied to the fuel cell was verified by gas chromatography(GC).

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available