Liquid-Water Interactions with Gas-Diffusion-Layer Surfaces

  • Santamaria A
  • Das P
  • MacDonald J
  • et al.
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Abstract

© The Author(s) 2014. Published by ECS. Understanding dynamic liquid-water uptake and removal in gas-diffusion layers (GDLs) is essential to improve the performance of polymer-electrolyte fuel cells and related electrochemical technologies. In this work, GDL properties such as breakthrough pressure, droplet adhesion force, and detachment velocity are measured experimentally for commonly used GDLs under a host of test conditions. Specifically, the effects of GDL hydrophobic (PTFE) content, thickness, and water-injection area and rate were studied to identify trends that may be beneficial to the design of liquid-water management strategies and next-generation GDL materials. The results conclude that liquid water moving transversely through or forming at the surface of GDL may be affected by internal capillary structure. Adhesion-force measurements using a bottom-injection method were found to be sensitive to PTFE loading, GDL thickness, and injection area/rate, the latter of which is critical for defining the control-volume limits for modeling and analysis. It was observed that higher PTFE loadings, increased thickness, and smaller injection areas led to elevated breakthrough pressure; meaning there was a greater resistance to forming droplets. The data are used to predict the onset of droplet instability via a simple force-balance model with general trend agreement.

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Santamaria, A. D., Das, P. K., MacDonald, J. C., & Weber, A. Z. (2014). Liquid-Water Interactions with Gas-Diffusion-Layer Surfaces. Journal of The Electrochemical Society, 161(12), F1184–F1193. https://doi.org/10.1149/2.0321412jes

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