This disclosure relates to a fuel cell system. More particularly, the disclosure relates to a method and apparatus for generating steam within a fuel cell stack of a fuel cell system.
One typical fuel cell system includes a fuel cell stack having an anode plate and a cathode plate arranged on either side of a proton exchange membrane. The fuel stack also typically includes coolant channels, which circulates coolant in a coolant loop within the fuel cell system. One typical coolant is water.
Some fuel cell stacks produce coolant at temperatures below boiling point with the coolant ambient pressure with the fuel cell stack. Thus, no steam is produced inside such a fuel cell stack. To produce steam under such conditions, one example fuel cell system incorporates a valve and a flash evaporator arranged externally of the fuel cell stack to convert the low temperature coolant to steam. The steam is then used in a fuel reformation system.
A fuel cell system includes a fuel cell stack having an anode plate and a cathode plate arranged on opposing sides of a proton exchange membrane. Cooling channels are in thermal contact with at least one of the anode plate and the cathode plate and include an internal coolant passage. A pressure-drop device is provided in the coolant channels and is configured to provide a sub-atmospheric pressure within the coolant passage. A compression device fluidly interconnects to and is downstream from the internal coolant passage by a coolant system loop and configured to convey a sub-atmospheric pressure coolant steam. The compression device is configured to increase the pressure and a temperature of the sub-atmospheric coolant steam to a super-atmospheric pressure and maintain the coolant steam within a steam region of a pressure-enthalpy curve.
A method of producing steam within the fuel cell system includes a step of creating a pressure drop within a fuel cell stack to lower the boiling point of coolant within the fuel cell stack. The coolant is boiled within the fuel cell stack to produce steam. The steam is supplied to a component outside of the fuel cell stack via a coolant steam loop.
The disclosure can be further understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings wherein:
A fuel cell system 10 is schematically illustrated in
Coolant channels 20 are arranged throughout the fuel cell stack 12, typically between the cells 19. A coolant loop 22 is in fluid communication with the coolant channels 20 and circulates a coolant, water in one example, throughout the system 10 to regulate the temperature of the fuel cell stack 12. The coolant may also be used for other purposes within the system 10, as needed.
Some low temperature fuel cell applications operate at a temperature that heats the coolant to less than 100° C. With water as the coolant, steam will not be generated under these conditions. However, steam can be useful within the system 10. To this end, the system 10 includes a pressure drop device 24 arranged internally to the fuel cell stack 12. As schematically illustrated in
In the example, the coolant loop 22 includes a first coolant steam line 28 that conveys sub-atmospheric pressure steam to a compression device 26. The compression device 26 compresses the sub-atmospheric pressure steam, thus, also raising its temperature, to produce super-atmospheric pressure steam (for example, to 1.1 atmospheres and 150° C.) that is conveyed through a second coolant steam line 30 to a junction 34.
A fuel source 36 supplies fuel to the junction 34, which intermixes the fuel and the super-atmospheric pressure coolant steam to provide a mixture. The mixture from the junction 34 is supplied to a fuel processing system 38 that produces reformate, which is provided to the anode plate 14 via a reformate line 40. The fuel source 36 may also provide fuel to a burner 42, which drives, in part, the fuel processing system 38. Unused coolant may be returned to the coolant channels 20 through a coolant return line 32.
The compression device 26 maintains the coolant steam within a steam region of a pressure-enthalpy curve. By generating the steam at sub-atmospheric pressures within the fuel cell stack, the sub-atmospheric pressure coolant steam can be quasi-isentropically compressed by the compression device.
The compression device 26, which may be a scroll compressor, for example, can be driven by an electric motor. The additional efficiency enabled by generating the steam internally within the fuel cell stack, rather than externally, is sufficient to provide an overall fuel cell efficiency increase despite the losses associated with the compression device.
An example fuel cell stack 12 is illustrated in
Another example fuel cell stack 112 is illustrated in
Another fuel cell stack 212 is illustrated in
Referring to
Another fuel cell system 110 is illustrated in
Although an example embodiment has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of the claims. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine their true scope and content.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2011/033848 | 4/26/2011 | WO | 00 | 10/24/2013 |