This invention relates generally to a fuel cell system and, more particularly, to a system wherein an oxygen-containing gas is fed to the cathode chamber of a fuel cell and a hydrogen-containing gas is fed to its anode chamber.
A fuel cell comprises a cathode chamber, an anode chamber, and an electrolyte (or ion-conducting) separator positioned therebetween. During operation of the fuel cell, an oxygen-containing gas passes through the cathode chamber, a hydrogen-containing gas passes through the anode chamber, and the hydrogen reacts with the oxygen to generate electricity. The oxygen-containing gas can be atmospheric air which is fed through the cathode chamber via an air compressor. The hydrogen-containing gas can be produced by feeding, via another compressor, a gas through a reformer and then feeding the reformed gas through the anode chamber. Also, exhaust from the anode chamber can be recirculated, via a fluid-handler, back through the anode chamber.
Accordingly, a fuel cell system will include compressors and other fluid-handlers which supply gases to the cathode/anode chambers. In such a system, it is important that lubricating liquids not be introduced into the cathode chamber and/or the anode chamber, as such lubricants can poison the electrolyte or otherwise harm effective electricity-generating reactions. Thus, a fuel cell system will include compressors and/or other fluid-handlers wherein the fluid-contacting components do not use lubrication.
The present invention provides a fuel cell system wherein a single motor is used to supply both cathode gas to the fuel cell's cathode chamber and anode gas to its anode chamber. This single-motor supply reduces the system cost, complexity, and power consumption. Moreover, this dual cathode/anode supply can be accomplished, at a high efficiency, without liquid lubrication of gas-contacting components.
More particularly, the present invention provides a fuel cell system comprising a fuel cell and a fluid-supplying device. The fuel-supplying device includes a first fluid-handler (e.g., a first compressor), a second fluid-handler (e.g., a second compressor), and a motor. The first fluid-handler supplies a cathode gas to the cathode chamber of the fuel cell and the second fluid-handler supplies an anode gas to its anode chamber. The motor can be an electric motor and, in any event, drives both the first compressor's rotor and the second compressor's rotor.
The fluid-handlers can each comprise a stator surface concentrically positioned around a stator axis, and the rotor can be positioned within the space defined by the stator surface for eccentric rotation therein about a rotor axis. The fluid handlers can each also comprise a vane which, upon rotation of the rotor, is rotated about the stator axis. During this rotation, the tip of the vane follows a close, but non-contacting, path around the stator surface. This travel path of the vane can accomplish effective interface sealing without the use of lubricants.
These and other features of the invention are fully described and particularly pointed out in the claims. The following description and annexed drawings set forth in detail a certain illustrative embodiment of the invention, this embodiment being indicative of but one of the various ways in which the principles of the invention may be employed.
Referring now to the drawings, and initially to
The illustrated fuel cell 14 includes an inlet 20c into and an outlet 22c out of the cathode chamber 16c, and an inlet 20a into and an outlet 22a out of the anode chamber 16a. As shown in
It should be noted that the fuel cell system 12 is shown only schematically in the drawings and can include other components upstream and downstream of the fuel cell 14. For example, the system 12 can include a carbon monoxide eliminator downstream of the reformer 24, and/or vaporizer upstream of the reformer 24. A mixing tank, a regulator, a pump, and/or valving can be provided downstream of the fuel tank and upstream of the reformer 24. A condenser, a radiator, an ion-exchanger, drains, valving, or other components can be provided for the handling of the exhaust from the outlets 22. As for the fuel cell 14, the simplicity of the illustration is for ease in explanation only, as it could comprise a plurality of cathode/anode chambers 16 and a plurality of separators 18 stacked or otherwise assembled to provide the desired generation of electricity.
The fluid-supplying device 10 supplies, directly and/or indirectly, the fuel cell 14 with oxygen and hydrogen for the generation of electricity. For example, in
Referring now to
The cathode-side compressor 30c comprises a stator housing 40c forming a cylindrical space 42c defined by a continuous inner surface 44c which curves concentrically around an axis 46c. (
The compressor 30c also comprises a rotor shaft 60c and a rotor 62c. (
The compressor 30c further comprises a single vane 74c having an axial dimension corresponding to that of the rotor 62c, cross-sectional dimensions corresponding to the rotor slot 72c, and a radial dimension corresponding to the stator surface 44c. (
The anode-side compressor 30a can comprise the same components as the cathode-side compressor 30c and like reference numerals (with an “a” rather than a “c” suffix) are used to designate like parts. The rotor axis 64c of the cathode-side compressor 30c is coextensive with the rotor axis 65a of the anode-side compressor 30a and, preferably the stator axes 46c and 46a are also coextensive. (
The illustrated motor 32 is an electric motor that comprises a stator 82, a rotor 84, a coupling ring 86 attached to the rotor 84 via connectors 88, and a casing 90 surrounding these components. (
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to certain preferred embodiments, it is obvious that equivalent and obvious alterations and modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of this specification. For example, the rotor shafts 60c/60a could be replaced with a rotor single shaft and/or the motor 32 could be a non-electric mechanism. Also, the fluid-supplying device 10 need not be used in a fuel cell system 12 and/or with a fuel cell 14, as it may find application in other compressor situations where lubricating liquids would be harmful and even in situations where lubrication can be tolerated. Moreover, the fluid-handlers 30c and 30a can function as both expanders and compressors, depending upon which the fixture 48/50 is used as the inlet/outlet. In fact, one component 30c/30a could function as a compressor while the other component 30a/30c functions as an expander.
One may now appreciate that the present invention provides a fluid-supplying device 10 that can be used to supply an oxygen-containing gas to a cathode chamber 16c and a hydrogen-containing gas to the anode chamber 16a of a fuel cell 14. The device 10 accomplishes this dual supply with a single motor 32 and with effective non-lubrication sealing within compressor components 30c and 30a.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/517,225 filed on Oct. 31, 2003 and entitled “Dual Compressor System.” The entire disclosure of this provisional application is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60517225 | Oct 2003 | US |