The invention generally concerns the forming of a seal between two components of different mean thermal expansion coefficient, chosen for example from among metallic components and ceramic components.
It generally applies to ceramic-metal connections operating at high temperature.
It is advantageously applied to high temperature steam electrolyzers (usually and hereunder designated HTE) used for hydrogen production.
It can also be applied to fuel cells operating at high temperature i.e. Solid Oxide Fuel Cells usually and hereunder designated SOFC.
HTE concerns electrochemical systems intended to produce hydrogen from the electrolysis of water at between 600° C. and 1000° C. They represent one of the most promising processes for producing hydrogen.
The applicant therefore envisages the rapid manufacture of electrolysers coupled with heat sources that do not generate greenhouse gases, notably of nuclear, geothermal or solar origin.
To arrive at competitive production costs, one option is to electrolyse water in vapour phase and at high temperature. For this technology, the management of gases and maintained sealing over time form one of the major barriers.
At envisaged temperatures, an electrochemical cell is used which chiefly comprises a three-layer stack in ceramic of which one drawback is the fragility thereof. This can limit the forces which can be applied to the seals. In addition, since electrolyte materials have low ion conduction properties at low temperature, it is consequently necessary to raise the operating temperature to above 600° C. to limit ohmic losses. This generates difficulties with respect to the resistance of metal materials, notably the bipolar plates and seals. While oxidation appears to be major the drawback at high temperatures for bipolar plates, the mechanical strength of the seals is even more penalizing.
Insufficient leak-tightness of the seals i.e. which would generate loss of fuel (and of end product) of more than 1% would not allow HTE or high temperature fuel cells (SOFC) to achieve a competitive energy yield compared with today's mature technologies.
The solutions of reference for the sealing of these systems use glass seals. However glass has poor thermal cycling properties.
Sealing solutions using metallic seals placed under compression which are currently commercially available, which would allow sufficient performance levels to be obtained, require the application of high clamping forces, typically of more than 20 N/seal cm.
Yet, as mentioned above, the cell used in fuel cells of SOFC type or for HTE contains fragile materials such as the ceramic electrolyte and porous electrodes. These fragile materials cannot withstand the high clamping forces indicated above.
Therefore, numerous seals with low compressive force have been recently developed. Some seals, at the development stage, are integrated into spacers separating the elementary cells in a fuel cell assembly.
Document U.S. Pat. No. 7,226,687 can be cited which discloses a stack of fuel cells in which the anode of one cell and the cathode of the adjacent cell are separated by metal separators acting as seals. Each separator is made using a stamping process and curling the edges. Each separator with curled edge only acts under axial compression. This document does not focus on the seal between two materials of different mean thermal expansion coefficient.
Therefore few sealing solutions are proposed at the present time for seals directly applicable to SOFCs and/or HTE and with low clamping force typically of less than 20 N/seal cm.
The objective of the invention is therefore to propose a new type of connection between two components of different mean thermal expansion coefficient whose leak-tightness is efficiently ensured at high temperature typically higher than 500° C., using a low clamping force, and which withstands the thermal cycles conducted in HTEs and/or SOFCs.
For this purpose, the subject matter of the invention is an assembly between two components of different mean thermal expansion coefficient, comprising an element forming a seal inserted between the two components whose mean thermal expansion coefficient differs by a value of at least 1.10−6 K−1 from that of at least one of the two components and whose continuous shape comprises planar surfaces separated from one another and at least one end portion located outside the portions formed between the surfaces.
According to the invention, the sealing of the assembly is obtained:
below a predetermined threshold temperature, by compressing the seal in a direction orthogonal to the components, obtained by constant clamping of the components towards each other which places part of the planar surfaces in fixed bearing upon one of the components and another part of the planar surfaces upon the other component, whilst leaving the end portion of the seal free of any contact,
above the threshold temperature, by orthogonal compression of the seal again obtained by clamping, and by compression of the seal in a direction radial to the components obtained by sliding of at least part of the planar surfaces bearing upon a component during temperature rise, and until the end portion is placed under radial compression by the same component.
The solution of the invention therefore comprises a combination of compression orthogonal to the components obtained by initial clamping, and radial compression obtained by sliding of the seal due to the difference in thermal expansion until the seal is placed under axial compression by the component(s).
Consideration must also be given to phenomena of creep and relaxation due to the viscoplastic properties of the materials.
Creep is a well-understood phenomenon and is a function of time. It occurs when a viscoplastic material is subjected to a constant force over time. The person skilled in the art therefore takes care to define a seal shape such that its yield point is never reached during thermal cycles over the period of use of the assembly.
Similarly, if the seal is worked at constant height, i.e. under a force varying over time (since the material relaxes), the choice of material and thickness is adapted so that relaxation of the material remains sufficiently low thereby maintaining sufficient contact force to ensure the desired sealing.
The table given in
To take these problems into account, it is possible to use commercial simulation software allowing the selection of materials and material thickness.
According to one advantageous embodiment, the seal has a mean thermal expansion coefficient which differs from that of one of the components by a value of between 0 and 10−6 K−1 and a continuous shape comprising three planar surfaces separated from each other and an end portion located outside the portions formed between the surfaces, sealing being provided:
below the threshold temperature, by constant clamping, which places one of the three planar surfaces bearing upon the component having the coefficient differing the least from the coefficient of the seal, the two other planar surfaces upon the component having the coefficient differing the most from the coefficient of the seal, whilst leaving the end portion free of any contact,
above the threshold temperature, by orthogonal compression of the seal obtained by the same constant clamping which maintains the planar surface under fixed bearing upon the component with the least difference in coefficient, and by compression of the seal in a direction radial to the components obtained by sliding of the two other planar surfaces on the component with the greatest coefficient difference until the end portion is placed under radial compression by the same component.
According to one embodiment, the component having the mean thermal expansion coefficient which differs the least is a metallic component, and the component with the mean thermal expansion coefficient which differs the most is a ceramic component.
According to one variant, the metallic component and the seal may form a single block element. This notably allows the seal to be integrated directly in a structural part of a HTE stack or SOFC fuel cell, e.g. an interconnect or a collector in charge of distributing gases.
According to one advantageous configuration, the two components are planar substrates at least one thereof comprising an undercut in which a planar surface is housed that is joined to the end portion, the placing under radial compression of the latter being made against an edge of this undercut.
According to another preferred configuration, the placing under radial compression of the end portion is made against an edge of one of the substrates.
The invention also concerns a seal intended to be inserted in an assembly described in the foregoing, comprising at least one continuous shape comprising planar surfaces separated from each other and an end portion located outside the portions formed between the surfaces, the shape being obtained by a single stamping operation of sheet metal.
One embodiment of said seal may advantageously comprise two continuous shapes, each obtained by a single stamping operation of sheet metal and fixed together by welding or brazing at one of their planar surfaces.
According to one variant of embodiment, the two continuous shapes are substantially identical and fixed together head-to-tail so that the two end portions do not face one another. This variant of embodiment of the seal can be advantageous if the two components to be assembled have different mean thermal expansion coefficients α, each differing by at least 1.10−6 K−1 from the coefficient of the seal, but only one of the components has a lower coefficient than the seal.
According to one variant of embodiment, the two continuous shapes are substantially identical and fixed together symmetrically relative to a plane defined by the common planar surface. This variant of embodiment of the seal may be advantageous if the two components to be assembled have different thermal expansion coefficients and both have lower coefficients than the seal, the difference being at least 10−6 K−1.
The invention also concerns a seal intended to be inserted in an assembly described previously, whose continuous shape comprises a first part comprising planar surfaces separated from each other and obtained by a single stamping operation of sheet metal, and a second part comprising an end portion located outside the portions formed between the surfaces which is fixed to the first part by welding and/or brazing.
The sheet metal to be stamped to arrive at the shape of the seal may advantageously comprise ferritic steel or austenitic steel or a nickel alloy of Inconel 600 or Haynes 230 types.
For applications in which it is necessary to provide for electric insulation concomitant with leak-tightness, the metal sheet can be coated with an electrically insulating material. This coating can be formed by growing an oxide on the surface of the stamped sheet metal, or by usual layer depositing advantageously from an alumina-forming alloy. Preferably, the insulating layer can be obtained by thermal oxidation in air at 1,000° C. or higher, prior to forming by stamping. Consolidation annealing under similar conditions is recommended after stamping.
Additionally, to guarantee radial sealing even further, a layer of ductile material can advantageously be deposited, after stamping the sheet metal, on at least one end portion or on a contact area either with direct contact or on the coating of electrically insulating material. This may be a layer of silver of silver-containing compound and preferably comprising one of the following elements: Cu, Sn, Bi, Si, Co. This additional ductile layer may be applied by electrolytic deposit or serigraphy, these two depositing methods advantageously using a mask to allow precise location of this layer. It may have a thickness of between 1 and 10 μm.
According to one variant, the end portion is a simple curve directly joined to one of the planar surfaces.
If the size of the assembly is of the order of 100 mm, the sheet metal advantageously has a thickness of between 0.07 mm and 0.5 mm.
The height separating two planar surfaces corresponding to a draw depth of the sheet metal preferably lies between 0.2 mm and 1 mm.
The tilt angle of the segments between the planar surfaces may lie between 30 and 80°, and is advantageously between 30 and 55°.
Finally, the invention concerns a fuel cell operating at high temperature (SOFC) or a high temperature electrolyser (HTE) comprising an assembly mentioned above.
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will be better understood on reading the detailed description given with reference to the following figures amongst which:
The assembly of the invention here is formed in a high temperature electrolyser HTE. The proposed sealing solution uses a seal 5 such as schematically illustrated in
It is specified here that the orthogonal or axial direction X is the direction which extends along a section transverse to the electrolysis cell 1 and to the components 2, 3. The radial direction R is the direction which extends over a section parallel to the electrolysis cell 1 and to the components 2, 3.
The high temperature electrolyser HTE in
The electrolysis cell 1 such as illustrated comprises an electrolyte 10 directly supported by the ceramic support 2, and sandwiched between an anode 11 and a cathode 12 (
In the embodiment illustrated in
By “mean thermal expansion coefficient” is meant the integral of the function representing the values of this coefficient as a function of temperature, between ambient temperature Tamb and functioning temperature Tfonc, divided by the difference between these two temperatures:
As is more usual, a simple arithmetic mean between the two extreme values (α (Tfonc)−α (Tamb)) divided by the temperature difference Δ=Tfonc−Tamb is sufficient for proper dimensioning of the seal.
Other stainless steels or nickel-based alloys can also be envisaged.
The cell holder 2 is a planar substrate made in bulk yttria-stabilized zirconia. Its mean thermal expansion coefficient α2 is of the order of 10−6 K−1 at ambient temperature.
The seal 5 according to the first embodiment in
This sheet metal is ferritic steel of F17 type (AISI 430) or austenitic type (e.g. AISI 316 L) or a nickel-based alloy of Inconel 600 or Haynes 230 type. Their mean thermal expansion coefficients αj are respectively of the order of 11.10−6, 17.10−6, 15.10−6, 11.10−6 K−1.
Additionally, the shape of the seal is designed so that it does not reach its creep rupture point during a cycle of use of the assembly, of predetermined duration. This predetermined duration is a function of the intended application for the HTE electrolyser: at least 5,000 hours for portable application, at least 50,000 hours for stationary application.
On the basis of knowledge of the creep rupture strength of the seal 5 in ferritic AISI 430 steel, in relation to temperature and the number of hours' use intended for the electrolyser (see the table in
In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown in
Therefore, the assembly according to a first embodiment of the invention illustrated in
1) Below a predetermined threshold temperature, the seal 5 is compressed in a direction X orthogonal to the components 2, 3 obtained by constant clamping of components 2, 3 towards one another. With this initial clamping, the planar surface 51 is placed under fixed bearing upon the metallic interconnect 3, and the planar surfaces 51, 52 upon the cell holder 2 whilst leaving the end portion 53 of the seal free of any contact (see
2) Above the threshold temperature, the seal 5 remains compressed in direction X still by clamping, and becomes compressed in the radial direction R to components 2, 3. More precisely, during the temperature rise, the planar surface 51 is held under fixed bearing upon the interconnect 3, whilst subsequent to the difference in thermal expansion between the cell holder 2 and the seal 5, the planar surfaces 50 and 52 slide on the cell holder until the end portion 53 is placed under radial compression by the vertical edge 200 of the undercut 20.
The threshold temperature is determined in relation to the radial dimensions of the assembly, the materials, their expansion coefficient and the operating temperature of the assembly.
In the figures, the arrows F1 indicate the clamping force, lower than 20N/cm of seal 5, between the cell holder 2 and the interconnect 3 contributing towards axial compression in direction X, and the arrows F2 indicate the radial compression exerted upon the seal 5 subsequent to the difference in thermal expansion between the seal 5 and the cell holder 2. Ellipses are also shown which indicate the areas in which the leak-tightness of the invention is set up during the rise in temperature.
In the embodiment shown in
In this embodiment shown in
The seal 5 of the embodiment shown in
The embodiment in
The embodiment in
the difference αj−α2 is greater by at least 1.10−6 K−1;
the difference α3−αj is greater by at least 1.10−6 K−1. In other words, the component 3 has a mean thermal expansion coefficient that is greater than that of the seal. Here, the two continuous shapes 5a, 5b are substantially identical and fixed together head-to-tail so that the two end portions 53a, 53b do not face each other. In this embodiment shown in
Other improvements can be envisaged without departing from the scope of the invention.
The high temperature assembly of the invention has been described with reference to the figures for sealing of the cathode compartment and to avoid losing the hydrogen produced in a HTE electrolyser. It can just as well be reproduced on the anode side thereby forming a seal on the oxygen side.
The seal 5 such as illustrated in the HTE shown in
The assembly of the invention is also particularly adapted to large-scale architectures of HTE electrolysers or SOFC fuel cells, in which the differences between expansion coefficients give rise to major deformations.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08 54232 | Jun 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/057764 | 6/23/2009 | WO | 00 | 12/16/2010 |