The disclosure generally relates to fuel cells. More specifically, this disclosure relates to systems and method for connecting groups of fuel cells.
A fuel cell is a device that can convert fuel (e.g., hydrogen) and oxidant (e.g., oxygen) in an electrochemical reaction that releases electrons and produces reaction products (e.g., water). While the specific voltage generated by a fuel cell depends on the composition of the fuel used in the electrochemical fuel cell reaction, most fuel cells can generate about 1 volt of electric potential at an amperage that is dependent of the surface areas of the fuel cell electrodes, assuming a sufficient supply of fuel and oxidant is provided. The resultant electrical power produced by a fuel cell, which is also dependent on the fuel cell electrode surface area, and can range from several hundred milliwatts to several hundred watts.
To provide the electrical voltage, current and power demanded by many electrical loads, fuel cell systems designs typically comprise a plurality of electrically connected individual fuel cells. Fuel cell systems often electrically connect several individual fuel cells together in groups to raise the electric potential across the several cells, the current supplied by the group at a particular voltage, or some combination of both voltage and current. The electrical connections provided between individual fuel cells (specifically from the anode of one fuel cell to the cathode of another cell) may be referred to as “primary interconnects.” The higher-voltage groups of fuel cells may then be connected to other higher-voltage groups in parallel or series to provide more power output. The electrical connections between these groups of fuel cells may be referred to as “secondary interconnects.”
Systems and methods for connecting fuel cells with secondary interconnects remain an area of interest. Some existing systems have various shortcomings, drawbacks, and disadvantages. Accordingly, there remains a need for further contributions in this area of technology.
While many fuel cell systems connect individual fuel cells to one another in a manner resembling that described above, there exist many different designs for fuel cell systems comprising a plurality of fuel cells having primary interconnects. One such design is the integrated planar solid-oxide fuel cell (SOFC), also known as a segmented-in-series SOFC. An example of an integrated planar SOFC system 100 deposited on fuel cell tube 130 is illustrated in
Substrate 120 is often shaped as a tube that may define internal passages (or channels) 142, which may be parallel to one another, for the flow of fuel, oxidant, or both. A plurality of individual fuel cells 140 may be deposited on one surface of the substrate 120. The porous substrate tube 120 may be circular or flat, comprising a pair of generally planar, parallel surfaces. Substrate 120 may be a flat tube, as shown in
A plurality of fuel cells 140 on one side of a tube 130 may also be electrically connected in series or parallel to another fuel cell 140 or plurality of fuel cells 140 on another side of the same tube 130 by secondary interconnects wires 102. The secondary interconnects (SICs) 102 and 104 may be disposed proximate to the distal ends 144 and 146, respectively, of the tube 130 and may be electrically coupled with the ACC 114 and CCC 106 of the cells 140 proximate to the distal ends 144 and 146 of the tube 130, respectively. The SICs 102 and 104 may be a metal wire that electrically connects the plurality of fuel cells 140 on the top surface 152 and bottom surface 154 together in parallel, although other electrical connections are possible. As shown in
Additionally, these connected pluralities of fuel cells 140 on one tube 130 may be connected to additional pluralities of fuel cells 140 on adjacent tubes 130 by additional secondary interconnects.
While the fuel cell tubes 230 in
A plurality of bundles 200 may be electrically connected to form a strip, and multiple strips can form a block to generate higher voltages and electrical power.
SICs of this design present challenges which can hamper the performance of a fuel cell system. For example, the gap 256 between SIC wires 202 is difficult to control in this design. This gap 256 may be reduced during the handling and assembly of the system, and this reduction may occur at one end of a pair of cell tubes, such, e.g., between 230c and 230d in
As described herein, systems and methods for intra- and inter-fuel cell tube electrical connections are disclosed that provide more robust and reliable fuel cell system designs by addressing the aforementioned short comings of previous systems and methods.
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure a fuel cell system is provided. The fuel cell system may be a segmented-in-series, solid-oxide fuel cell system. The fuel cell system may comprise a first and second fuel cell tube and a secondary interconnect. Each of the fuel cell tubes may comprise a substrate having a first and second end and a pair of generally planar opposing major surfaces extending between the ends, a plurality of fuel cells disposed on one of said major surfaces, wherein the fuel cells are electrically coupled in series, a first sheet conductor providing an electrical path from a location on one of the major surfaces to a location on the other of the major surfaces proximate the first end of the substrate, the first sheet conductor being electrically coupled to said plurality of fuel cells, and a second sheet conductor providing an electrical path from a location on one of the major surfaces to a location on the other of the major surfaces proximate the second end of said substrate, the second sheet conductor being electrically coupled to said plurality of fuel cells. The secondary interconnect may provide an electrical path between the first and second fuel cell tubes. The first fuel cell tube may be positioned with a major surface thereof being spaced from and parallel to a major surface of the second fuel cell tube, the secondary interconnect being electrically coupled to said first sheet conductor of each of said first and second fuel cell tubes.
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, a fuel cell system is provided. The fuel cell system may comprise a plurality of fuel cell tubes, and a secondary interconnect. The tubes may comprise a substrate comprising a first end and a second end, a first surface and a second surface, each of the first and second surfaces extending continuously between the first and second ends, a first and second edge joining the first and second surfaces, the first and second edges running from the first to second ends, a plurality of fuel cells disposed on the first and second surfaces, wherein the fuels cells disposed on the first surface are electrically coupled in series to each other by one or more primary interconnects, and the fuel cells disposed on the second surface are electrically coupled in series to each other by the one or more primary interconnects, a first sheet conductor electrically coupling the fuel cells disposed on the first surface to the fuel cells disposed on the second surface proximate the first end, a second sheet conductor electrically coupling the fuel cells disposed on the first surface to the fuel cells disposed on the second surface proximate the second end. The first and second sheet conductors are arranged such that the fuel cells disposed on the first surface are electrically coupled in parallel with the fuel cells disposed on the second surface. The secondary interconnect may electrically couple a first tube of the plurality to a second tube of the plurality, wherein the secondary interconnect electrically contacts the first sheet conductor of the first tube proximate to the first end and first surface of the first tube and the first sheet conductor of the second tube proximate to the first end and second surface of said second tube.
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, a method is of connecting fuel cells in a fuel cell system is provided. The fuel cell system may comprise a plurality of tubes having a first side and a second side, the first and second sides extending between a first end and a second end, a plurality of fuel cells deposited on the first side and the second sides, and a sheet conductor wherein the fuel cells deposited on the first side are electrically coupled to the fuel cells deposited on the second side by the sheet conductor. The method may comprise electrically coupling a fuel cell deposited on a first tube of said plurality to a fuel cell deposited on a second tube of said plurality using a secondary interconnect in electrical contact with the sheet conductors of the said first and second tubes proximate said first ends.
The details of one or more embodiments of the disclosure are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the disclosure will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
The description herein makes reference to the accompanying drawings wherein like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout the several views.
Referring to the drawings, some aspects of a non-limiting examples of a fuel cell system in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure are schematically depicted. In the drawing, various features, components and interrelationships therebetween of aspects of embodiments of the present disclosure are depicted. However, the present disclosure is not limited to the particular embodiments presented and the components, features and interrelationships therebetween as are illustrated in the drawings and described herein.
In accordance with some aspects of the disclosure, fuel cell tubes having fuel cells that are electrically coupled to fuel cells on other fuel cell tubes, or on different sides of the same tube using SICs are provided. These fuel cell tubes may utilize conductive ink traces and sheet conductors to provide electrical pathways from the fuel cells on one side of a fuel cell tube to the fuel cells on the other side of the same fuel cell tube. A SIC may provide an electrical pathway from the sheet conductor of one fuel cell tube to the sheet conductor of an adjacent fuel cell tube. In this manner, the number of SIC wires used to electrically couple fuel cells is reduced or eliminated. Importantly, the elimination of SIC wires that are disposed between adjacent fuel cell tubes at one end of the tube but that are not intended to provide an electrical pathway between the two adjacent tubes are eliminated, significantly reducing the risk of arcing and short circuits, movement of SIC wires during manufacturing, handling, and testing and operation, and provides easier manufacturing and installation. This new design provides for a more robust fuel cell system.
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, a fuel cell system 300 having a fuel cell tube 330 having fuel cells 340 electrically coupled to an SIC wire 302 is provided in
Conductor 326 may electrically couple the SIC wire 302 to the primary interconnect 316. In some embodiments, conductor 326 may comprise the same material as CCC 306. In some embodiments, conductor 326 may be referred to as a SIC layer and be comprised of the same or similar materials and have a similar design to, e.g., the SIC (e.g., layer 40) as described in the concurrently filed U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. ______ and ______. In some embodiments, conductor 326 may comprise multiple layers, with one layer comprising material from which CCC 306 is composed and another layer comprising a different material, e.g., that from which SIC (e.g., layer 40 or 458 described below) is composed.
While not shown in
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, an end-view of a fuel cell system 400A and 400B showing a part of a fuel cell tube 430 is provided in
The fuel cell system 400A may further comprise a sheet conductor 434 and a sealing material 436. The sheet conductor 434 may comprise the materials specific in related the concurrently filed U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. ______, and ______. Sheet conductor 434 may contact SIC layer 458 at a location proximate to an edge of the SIC layer 458 that is closest to tube edge 450 and at some location that is a distance from the edge 450 that is greater than the distance between the SIC layer 458 and edge 450. This arrangement allows the sheet conductor 434 to overlap the SIC layer 458 by some amount and be electrically coupled thereto. The extent of the overlap and the area of contact between the SIC layer 458 and the sheet conductor 434 is dependent on the conductivity required of the SIC layer 458 and the sheet conductor 434 interface and other system considerations. More overlap assists current distribution and reduces electric resistance.
Sealing material 436 may be disposed proximate to an edge 450 of the fuel cell tube 430 between the sheet conductor 434 and the substrate 420 or other fuel cell component such as, e.g., the electrolyte 410 or the PAB 418, to include the CCC 406 and SIC layer 458. The sealing material 436 may comprise at least one material selected from the group comprising, glass, glass-ceramic, stabilized zirconia, alumina, La2Zr2O7 pyrochlore and SrZrO3.
The sheet conductor 434 and sealing material 436 may continue from the top surface 452 to the bottom surface (not shown) of tube 430. With this design, the sealing material 436 functions to seal the edges (e.g., 548 (not shown) and 450), thereby preventing fuel flowing from the channel 442 through the porous substrate 420 or oxidant leaking toward the channels 442. Additionally, sheet conductor 434 will provide an electrical path from a location on one of the major surfaces 452 of tube 430 to a location on another major surface (e.g. 454 (not shown)). The first location may be from a fuel cell 440 on the top surface 452 to a fuel cell 440 (not shown) on the bottom surface (not shown), although both locations need not be on a fuel cell or an electrochemically active fuel cell. For example, the SIC layer 458 may be extended beyond the cell 440 along the surface 452 of tube 430. The sheet conductor 434 may then be electrically coupled to the SIC layer 458 such that the sheet conductor 434 does not overlap the cell 440 in the y direction; such an overlap is shown in
Sheet conductors 434 may comprise a conductive ceramic or cermet and may be applied to the fuel cell tube 430 using an ink-paste dispensing method. In some embodiments the sheet conductor 434 may be applied through a conductive adhesive tape. The conductive ceramic may be LSM, PSM, LNF, LSF, LSCF, LSC etc. The ceramic component of the cermet may comprise conductive ceramic, such as LSM, PSM, LNF, LSF, LSCF, LSC etc, inert ceramic, such as YSZ, CSZ, ScSZ, Al2O3, La2Zr2O7, etc, or glass-ceramic in a 5 to 70 v % of the cermet and may comprise an alkaline aluminosilicate. In some embodiments glass-ceramic may comprise 20 to 60 v % of the cermet. In some embodiments, glass-ceramic may comprise 55 v % of the cermet. The metal component of the cermet may comprise a precious metal such as, e.g., Pd, Ag, Pt, and Au. In some embodiments the metal component cermet may comprise binary or ternary alloys of a precious metal. In some embodiments, the metal component may comprise a noble metal. In some embodiments, the metal component may comprise a nickel metal. The sheet conductor 434 may comprise nickel cermet, such as xNiO-(100-x)YSZ, wherein, 40<x<80 in weight percent, or xNiO-zTiO2-(100-x-z)YSZ, where in 40<x<80, 0<z<40 in weight percent. Preferably the volume fraction of Ni metal is 30 v % or higher after reduction.
The sheet conductor can be applied by several means including but not limited to techniques for ink deposition and adhesive tapes. After firing, the thickness of the sheet conductor may be around 20 to 100 micrometers thick. Depending on the conductivity of the cermet, the sheet conductor thickness can be in the range of 10 to 200 micrometers. The conductivity can be in the range of 500 to 10,000 S/cm, preferred to be higher than 4,000 S/cm.
The SIC layer 458 may also be known as an SIC bond layer. The SIC bond layer may comprise a conductive material. SIC layer 458 may have a thickness from 5 to 50 mircometers and a conductivity of 2,000 to 6,000 S/cm. The SIC bond layer 458 may help current distribution across the width of a fuel cell 440 and may be optimized for this function. This layer 458 and optimization may be required because the CCC 406, designed to balance conductivity and porosity to allow oxidant to flow to the cathode 408, may have a lower conductivity in the range of 20-50 S/cm. The SIC layer 458 may be dense or porous.
In accordance with some embodiments, the fuel cell system 400A and 400B may not comprise SIC layer 458. Rather, the sheet conductor 434 may directly contact CCC layer 406. One of ordinary skill will recognize that the design tradeoffs and necessity for a SIC layer 458 is related to the particular composition and electrical conductivity and other characteristics of the CCC layer 406 and other system requirements.
In the embodiment illustrated in
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, a fuel cell system 500 having a fuel cell tube 530 is illustrated in
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, a perspective view of fuel cell system 600 having a fuel cell tube 630 is provided in
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, a fuel cell system 700A bundle is illustrated in
Each of the tubes 730 may have a first end 744 and second end 746, which may be proximate to the left and right edges of
The fuel cells located on the first surface 752 of a tube 730 may be electrically coupled to the fuel cells located on the second surface 754 of the same tube 730. However, wires are not used to couple the fuel cells on the same tubes 730. Rather, sheet conductor 734, is electrically coupled to the anode, ACC, cathode or CCC or conductor (e.g. conductor 326) of one or more fuel cells on a tube 730. For example, the sheet conductor 734 may electrically couple to the fuel cells closest to end 744 on both the top and bottom surfaces of the 752 and 754 on the same tube 730a. Similarly, a sheet conductor 734 may electrically couple to the fuel cells closest to end 746 on both the top and bottom surfaces of the 752 and 754 on the same tube 730a. The sheet conductor 734 will provide an electrical path from a location on one of the surfaces of a tube 730a to a location on the other (or another, in embodiments in which there are more than two planar surfaces) surface of the same tube 730a. As will be appreciated by one of skill in the art, there are a myriad of electrical connections which may be formed between fuel cells on a single tube 730 using one or more sheet conductors 734. In some embodiments, the first and second sheet conductors 734 (e.g. 734a and 734b) are arranged such that the fuel cells disposed on the first surface 752 of a tube 730a are electrically coupled in parallel with the fuel cells disposed on the second surface 754. This may be achieved, e.g., by connecting a first sheet conductor 734a to the cathode, CCC, SIC layer or equivalent component of the fuel cells on both the first and second surfaces proximate the end 744 of the tube 730a and connecting the second sheet conduct 734b to the anode, ACC, SIC layer or equivalent component (such as a conductor of an electrochemically inactive cell as shown in
In some embodiments, a first tube 730a may be positioned with one of its major surfaces 754 being spaced from and parallel to a major surface 752 of a second, adjacent fuel cell tube 730b. In some embodiments, a third fuel cell tube 730c may be present wherein the third fuel cell tube 730c is positioned with a major surface 752 of that tube being spaced from and parallel to a major surface 754 of the second fuel cell tube 730b.
The fuel cell tubes 730 are electrically coupled to one another using SIC wire 702. As can be seen in
Depending on the arrangement of the SIC(s) 702 and 704 that connect tubes 730 and the sheet conductor(s) 734 electrically contacting one or more fuel cells on tubes 730, the tubes 730 may be electrically arranged in series or parallel. For example, the sheet conductor 734 proximate the first end 744 of uppermost tube 730a in
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, a fuel cell system 700B bundle is illustrated in
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, a cross section of bundle 800 of fuel cell tubes 830 is shown in
SIC 804 may comprise a first wire 836 electrically coupled to a sheet conductor 834, which may be a first sheet conductor, of the first (here upper) tube 830a. Wire 836 may be electrically contacting this sheet conductor 834. SIC 804 further comprises a second wire 838 electrically coupled to the sheet conductor 834, which may be a first sheet conductor of a second (here lower) tube 830b. Wire 838 may be in electrical contact with the lower sheet conductor 834. Wires 836 and 838 are bonded together in order to maintain the electrical coupling between the fuel cells of the upper tube 830 and the fuel cells of the lower tube 830. Wires 836 and 838 may be spot welded or bonded together by some other bonding. A bonding paste 828 may be used as described above.
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, designs for interconnecting adjacent fuel cell tubes 930 are illustrated in
In accordance with some embodiments, as illustrated in
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, a resilient member 964 may be provided as illustrated in
In accordance with some embodiments of the present disclosure, a corrugated member 1066 providing an electrical path way between adjacent tubes 1030 is provided in
A test of a fuel cell system such as that shown in
Various embodiments of the disclosure have been described. These and other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
This application is related to concurrently filed and co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. ______, filed Nov. 17, 2017, entitled “Multiple Fuel Cell Secondary Interconnect Bonding Pads and Wires,” bearing Docket Number G3541-00244/FCA12024, with named inventors Gerry Agnew, U.S. application Ser. No. ______, filed Nov. 17, 2017, entitled “Fuel Cell Ink Trace Interconnect,” bearing Docket Number G3541-00245/FCA12023, with named inventors Ed Daum, U.S. application Ser. No. ______, filed Nov. 17, 2017, entitled “Improved Fuel Cell Secondary Interconnect,” bearing Docket Number G3541-00246/FCAG11979, with named inventors Zhien Liu, Rich Goettler, and U.S. application Ser. No. ______, filed Nov. 17, 2017, entitled “Secondary Interconnect for Fuel Cell System,” bearing Docket Number G3541-00215/FCAG11484 (11711), with named inventors Zhien Liu, Rich Goettler, Gerry Agnew, and Peter Dixon, the entirety of all these applications is incorporated herein by reference.
This invention was made with Government support under Assistance Agreement No. DE-FE0023337 awarded by Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in this invention.