Recent advances in single-chamber fuel-cells: Experiment and modeling

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Abstract

Single-chamber fuel cells (SCFC) are ones in which the fuel and oxidizer are premixed, and selective electrode catalysts are used to generate the oxygen partial pressure gradient that in a conventional dual-chamber design is produced by physical separation of the fuel and oxidizer streams. SCFCs have been shown capable of generating power densities above 700 mW/cm2 with appropriate catalysts, making them potentially useful in many applications where the simplicity of a single gas chamber and absence of seals offsets the expected lower efficiency of SCFCs compared to dual-chamber SOFCs. SCFC performance is found to depend sensitively on cell microstructure, geometry, and flow conditions, making experimental optimization tedious. In this paper, we describe recent work focused on developing a quantitative understanding the physical processes responsible for SCFC performance, and the development of an experimentally-validated, physically-based numerical model to allow more rational design and optimization of SCFCs. The use of the model to explore the effects of fuel/oxidizer ratio, anode thickness, and flow configuration is discussed. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Hao, Y., Shao, Z., Mederos, J., Lai, W., Goodwin, D. G., & Haile, S. M. (2006). Recent advances in single-chamber fuel-cells: Experiment and modeling. Solid State Ionics, 177(19-25 SPEC. ISS.), 2013–2021. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssi.2006.05.008

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