The invention relates to an electrochemical electricity generating device of the solid-oxide fuel-cell type. Such a device may for example be used as a demonstrator of the high temperature “Solid Oxide Fuel Cell” (SOFC) technology or as a makeup electricity generator to recharge a battery, for example for a laptop, or to supply one or several small electrical devices.
The domain of the invention is solid oxide fuel cells that operate at very high temperatures, typically between 450° C. and 1000° C., with an output power varying from 50 W to several MW.
A fuel cell is a generator that directly converts reversible chemical energy of a reaction (in fact the free enthalpy of the reaction ΔG) into electrical energy. The fuel cell uses a fuel (hydrogen, methanol, natural gas, etc.) and an oxidant (oxygen from the air) without mixing them, and dissociates the chemical reaction into two electrochemical reactions, oxidation of the fuel (at the anode) and reduction of the oxidant (at the cathode). For example in an SOFC type cell, two hydrogen molecules are associated with one oxygen molecule to form two water molecules and to generate electricity.
The elementary cell of a stack is composed of two compartments, anodic and cathodic, separated by an ion conductor, the electrolyte, and connected through an external electronic conducting circuit. The electrolyte separates the reagents, prevents electrons from passing through the core of the stack, and enables the migration of ion species from one electrode to the other under the effect of the electric field created by the difference in oxygen concentration in the two compartments.
There are several types of fuel cells, differentiated essentially by the nature of the electrolyte used and the working temperature.
The reagents are renewed and the products are evacuated continuously. The fuel cell as a whole is an assembly of elementary cells connected to each other by interconnection materials, in a sufficiently large number for the electrochemical production of electricity to satisfy the required voltage and current conditions.
The theoretical efficiencies obtained (up to 85-90% global efficiency) are much higher than efficiencies that can be obtained by classical combustion (of the order of 30%), and polluting emissions are strongly reduced, and may even be zero if the fuel is hydrogen (water releases only). The relatively easy recovery of heat also makes it possible to envisage cogeneration (electricity+heat).
According to the ideal operating principle of a fuel cell, hydrogen that acts as the fuel is added at the anode and oxygen that acts as oxidant is added at the cathode. The oxygen used is usually oxygen in air for convenience reasons, and attempts are being made to replace hydrogen by natural gas (composed mainly of methane, CH4, and alcohols (such as ethanol C2H5OH) and liquid hydrocarbons (Liquefied Petroleum Gas-LPG), composed principally of propane C3H8), due to problems with the storage and distribution of hydrogen as a fuel. However, direct electrochemical oxidation of these fuels into H2 is a necessary prerequisite to the electrochemical oxidation of hydrogen. In particular, steam reforming and partial oxidation can be used. The fuel can be converted outside the core of the stack, or in some cases even inside the core of the stack, as for steam reforming of methane; this is then internal reforming of the fuel. One of the advantages of SOFC type cells, for which the operating temperature is high, is that this internal reforming is possible.
Natural gas is composed essentially of methane. There are three reactions for producing hydrogen from methane:
CH4+H2O→CO+3H2, (ΔG°880° C.=−46 kJ/mol) the steam reforming reaction:
CH4+½O2CO+2H2. (ΔG°880° C.=−234 kJ/mol) the partial oxidation reaction:
CH4→C+2H2. (ΔG′880° C.=−27 kJ/mol) the cracking reaction:
Complete oxidation (combustion) of methane can also occur:
CH4+2O2→CO2+2H2O ΔG800° C.0=−800.2 kJ/mol)
Details of these chemical reactions and the associated thermodynamic aspects are disclosed in document reference [5] at the end of the description.
Most SOFC type devices that exist in the world are complete devices (external reformer, post-combustion system, heat recovery, etc.), as described in document references [1] and [4], and intended for use under given stable operating conditions. There are several small demonstrators operating on natural gas or propane in the world as described in document reference [3], developed essentially for military use. Thus the Acumentrics company, as described in document reference [2], markets systems between 150 W and 10 kW, capable of resisting fast temperature increase/decrease cycles due to a tubular technology. As described in document reference [3], the Ultra Electronics AMI company is developing systems of a few hundred Watts for military and civil applications.
But devices according to prior art suffer from many weaknesses, the most important of which are:
The purpose of the invention is an electrochemical electricity generating device of the solid-oxide fuel-cell (SOFC) type capable of overcoming these disadvantages of devices known in prior art.
The invention relates to an electrochemical electricity generating device of the solid-oxide fuel-cell type, characterised in that it comprises a planar assembly consisting of at least one electrochemical cell located between first and second gas diffusing plates made of a ceramic material with a coefficient of expansion between 8×10−6 K−1 and 14×10−6 K−1 and in which equidistant holes are formed; first and second electricity collection metal grids each connected to a conducting wire allowing current to flow outside the device, being located on each side of said at least one cell between this cell and each of the first and second gas diffusion plates; and clamping means mechanically holding this planar assembly.
Advantageously, the gas diffusion plates are curved at their ends so as to embed the at least one electrochemical cell. The device also comprises a first and a second heat conducting element, for example metal plates in which holes are formed on each side of the first and second gas diffusion pates to surround them.
Advantageously, holes are formed in each gas diffusion plate with a diameter of between 4 and 6 mm, the centres of two adjacent holes being located at a distance of 8 to 12 mm from each other. The thickness of each gas diffusion plate is between 3 and 10 mm. Each gas diffusion plate is made from one of the following materials: alumina, zirconia or a material known as “macor” (registered trademark). Advantageously, the electrical conductivity of the electricity collection grids is higher than 100 S/m at 60° C. For example, they may be made from one of the following materials: nickel, platinum or gold. Advantageously, the clamping means clamp such that the clamping pressure on the at least one electrochemical cell is between 200 g/cm2 and 1000 g/cm2. This optimum clamping assures satisfactory electrical contact while limiting risks of degradation of the electrochemical cell when the temperature increases.
The invention has many advantages, and particularly the following:
As illustrated on
In the advantageous example embodiment, the device according to the invention has the following characteristics.
The gas diffusion plates 12 and 13 are composed of:
They can advantageously be made from one of the following materials: alumina, zirconia or a material known under the name of “macor” (registered trademark).
The electricity collection grids 16 and 17 have the following characteristics:
They can advantageously be made from one of the following materials: nickel, platinum or gold.
The electrochemical cell 11 illustrated on
Additional layers (the number of layers can be up to 10) can be added to improve the performances of the electrochemical cell 11.
The electrochemical cell 11 can indifferently be held in place mechanically by one of the layers, which in this case must be thick (thickness more than 80 μm).
The collecting grid on the air side 16 is then put into place, and the upper gas diffusion plate 12 is then installed. The two plates 12 and 13 are then clamped using clamping means 20, 21, 32 and 33, to mechanically retain the assembly 10, and provide efficient current collection through grids 16 and 17 (
Clamping must correspond to a pressure on the cell equal to 200 to 1000 g/cm2. This optimum clamping assures satisfactory electrical contact while limiting risks of degradation of the electrochemical cell 11 when the temperature increases.
The device according to the invention can thus form a rectangular parallelepiped about 20 cm long and wide and 3 cm high.
In one example embodiment illustrated on
½O2+2e−→O2− First electrochemical reaction:
H2+O2−→H2O+2e−
aCH4+bO2→cH2+dCO+eH2O+fCO2+heat Second electrochemical reaction:
A zone of this type and the nature of the gas diffusion plates 12 and 13 are optimised so that part of the gas is fully oxidised (combustion complete) and adds the necessary heat so that the temperature of the electrochemical cell 11 is of the order of 600 to 700° C. In this temperature range, the ion conduction of the thin electrolyte in the electrochemical cell is sufficient for the cell to be efficient. A zone of this type and the nature of the diffusion plates also make it possible that part of the gas is only partially oxidised. An H2+CO mix is then formed and this gas mix is a fuel for the electrochemical cell 11. The use of ceramic gas diffusion plates 12 and 13 makes it possible to accommodate mechanical stresses related to temperature gradients, and the electrochemical cell 11 can thus be heated to an ambient temperature of 600 of even 700° C. in a few minutes. Once the electrochemical cell 11 has reached the required temperature, it is possible for a current to circulate as a result of the electrochemical reactions to oxidise hydrogen and reduce oxygen in the air that can take place on each side of the electrochemical cell 11, and a voltage of about 0.8 V per cell appears at the terminals of the device. Several bulbs can then be powered, but any other device (motor, battery etc.) could also be powered by the invention described. Means of electrochemical characterisation can also be connected in order to make more precise measurements on the connected cells.
The voltage at the terminals of the device can then be increased, and adjusted if necessary, by connecting cells 24 to 29 in series with each other on a ceramic support 22 (between a positive pole PP and a negative pole PN, as shown for example on
As illustrated on
As illustrated on
The following elements are used in one advantageous example embodiment:
Such an embodiment can supply power for satisfactory operation of several bulbs. A polarisation curve (current/voltage) can be made to characterise the electrochemical performances of the invention more precisely. A current density of about 300 mA/cm2 is thus obtained at 0.3 V, as illustrated on
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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14 62578 | Dec 2014 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/079704 | 12/15/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2016/096793 | 6/23/2016 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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2 903 071 | Aug 2015 | EP |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20170365873 A1 | Dec 2017 | US |