The invention generally relates to the fuel cells, and specifically to use of a solid oxide fuel cell system in an aircraft.
A solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) is an electrochemical device that converts chemical energy directly into electrical energy using a solid oxide (i.e., ceramic) electrolyte. A solid oxide reversible fuel cell (SORFC) is an electrochemical device that converts chemical energy directly into electrical energy and subsequently reconverts electrical energy back to chemical energy.
The efficiency of transporting humans in aircraft is closely related to the mass of equipment and expendables per human passenger. There are efficiency improvements when the aircraft is increased in size and additional passengers are transported. At some size, a practical limit is reached and increased efficiency is only obtained by a fractional percentage engine efficiency improvement, squeezing additional passengers into a fixed space, a mass reduction of the on-board carried food, or similar incremental equivalent mass reductions per passenger carried.
In one aspect of the present invention an aircraft contains a plurality of solid oxide fuel cells located in different portions of the aircraft. A method of operating the plurality of solid oxide fuel cells includes providing power from each of the plurality of solid oxide fuel cells to at least one of a plurality of power consuming components located in a same portion of the aircraft as the solid oxide fuel cell.
In another aspect of the present invention, a method of operating at least one solid oxide fuel cell located in an aircraft includes providing ambient air and power to the solid oxide fuel cell without providing fuel to the solid oxide fuel cell to generate oxygen for the aircraft cabin when the aircraft is in flight.
The present inventors have realized that a solid oxide fuel cell system can combine the functions of many required aircraft systems and in the process can reduce the mass of the loaded aircraft and therefore increase the overall aircraft efficiency. The SOFCs may provide the electrical power needs of the aircraft both on the ground and/or in flight. On the ground, the SOFCs provide quiet and clean power to the aircraft. Noise and pollution are big airport operator concerns with the prior art equipment generally used to provide ground electrical power. In flight, the SOFCs may provide the electrical power to the aircraft at a much higher efficiency then the current method of running an electric generator off the propulsion gas turbine. This saves fuel and reduces takeoff mass and increases aircraft efficiency.
In the first embodiment, the aircraft contains a plurality of solid oxide fuel cells located in different portions of the aircraft. Preferably, the aircraft comprises a passenger airplane, such as a large passenger airplane which holds 100 or more passengers, for example. However, other types of aircraft may also be suitable. As shown in
While
The fact that the SOFC's are distributed throughout the aircraft significantly reduces the power conductor, such as copper, mass and increases aircraft efficiency. The aircraft 1 contains a plurality of power consuming components 9 located in different portions of the aircraft. For example, as shown in
Other optional mass reducing aircraft configurations include eliminating or downsizing other equipment such as heat generators and/or water storage, as the SOFCs generate these items as a free byproduct. Specifically, the SOFCs can operate on a hydrogen or a hydrocarbon (including natural gas, pure methane, pentane or jet fuel, such as Jet A, Jet A-1, Jet B, JP-8, etc.) fuel. Thus, if desired, the SOFCs can operate on the same jet fuel as the aircraft engines, which allows a separate fuel source for the SOFCs to be omitted. The fuel combines at the SOFC anode electrode with oxygen transmitted from the SOFC cathode electrode through the electrolyte to form water, heat and optionally other by-products if a hydrocarbon fuel is used.
Thus, the aircraft 1 may further comprise one or more optional water transport conduits 13 which are configured to provide water from the solid oxide fuel cells to the aircraft cabin. While only one conduit 13 connected to one SOFC or SOFC stack 3 is shown in
The aircraft 1 may further comprise one or more optional heat transport conduits 17 which are configured to provide heat from the solid oxide fuel cells to the aircraft cabin. While only one conduit 17 connected to one SOFC or SOFC stack 3 is shown in
The SOFC generates heat during operation. The heat transport conduit 17 transports heat from the SOFCs to the cabin, equipment (i.e., electronics, etc.) or other payload in need of heat. The heat transport conduit 17 may comprise pipe(s) or duct(s) filled with a heat transfer medium, such as a gas or liquid. Preferably, the conduit 17 uses air as the heat transfer medium. Cooling air is blown past or adjacent to the hot fuel cell stack through the conduit. The air absorbs heat as it is passed through the conduit and the warmed air is guided toward or adjacent to the remotely located cabin, equipment or other payload that needs to be heated. Thus, the conduit 17 provides heat to cabin, equipment or payload that would not ordinarily be heated by the SOFCs. The conduit 17 may be an open or a closed loop. The heat transport conduit can also operate with a liquid or a two-phase re-circulation loop. Other modes of heat transfer, such as conduction or radiation can also be used.
In a second embodiment of the invention, a method of operating at least one solid oxide fuel cell located in an aircraft includes providing ambient air and power to the solid oxide fuel cell without providing fuel (such as hydrogen or hydrocarbon fuel) to the solid oxide fuel cell to generate oxygen for the aircraft cabin when the aircraft is in flight. In the second embodiment, the aircraft may have all of the fuel cells in one location or the fuel cells may be distributed throughout the aircraft 1, as described with respect to the first embodiment above. Thus, the aircraft 1 may contain one or more SOFC stacks located only in one part of the aircraft or the aircraft may have the SOFC stacks distributed throughout the aircraft.
As shown in
Taking the ambient air at ambient pressure and without compression, a pure metabolic oxygen gas is electrochemically produced using the SOFCs. Using this oxygen for metabolic use allows the air circulation to be reduced and/or the amount of cabin pressurization to be reduced. By allowing the oxygen content in air to increase to a range of about 22% to about 25% and reducing the total pressure to establish the current oxygen partial pressure standard, a great reduction in structural mass of the aircraft can be realized along with significant aircraft efficiency gains.
Preferably, the SOFC contains reversible electrodes for oxygen generation, even if the SOFC is not operated reversibly, since the anode electrodes will be exposed to an oxidizing environment in the oxygen generation mode. The reversible electrodes may comprise, for example, any suitable materials found in solid oxide reversible fuel cells. In non-regenerative solid oxide fuel cells, nickel-YSZ mixtures are commonly used as anode (i.e., fuel) electrodes. Nickel requires a reducing environment in order to work properly. Thus, materials capable of conducting electrons in an oxidizing environment should be used as the anode electrode. For example, platinum that is mixed with YSZ or LSM can be used as the anode electrode material. Other materials that are capable of conducting electrons in an oxidizing environment can also be used.
The SOFC also contains a solid oxide (i.e., ceramic) electrolyte, such as yttria stabilized zirconia (YSZ) or scandia stabilized zirconia (SSZ). The cathode electrode may be made of an electrically conductive ceramic, such as strontium doped lanthanum manganite (LSM) or a noble metal such as platinum, which can be mixed with an oxygen ion conductor such as YSZ. Other materials capable of conducting electrons in an oxidizing environment can also be used.
If desired, the SOFCs may operate on the ground to produce quiet clean power, but in flight they switch to a highly efficient oxygen generator. In other words, when the aircraft is on the ground, air and fuel are provided to the solid oxide fuel cells to generate power for the aircraft. When the aircraft is in the air, the fuel is not provided to the SOFCs, and power (i.e., a voltage) is provided to the SOFCs to generate oxygen from ambient air.
Alternatively, the SOFCs may be operated to provide power to the aircraft on the ground and in flight. However, in case of emergency or failure, such as aircraft depressurization or malfunction of the air recycling or purification systems, the SOFCs switch to generating oxygen for metabolic use. In this case, the SOFCs may be switched manually by the pilot or automatically by a failure or depressurization detection sensor mechanism.
Alternatively, some but not all SOFCs switch from the power generation mode to the oxygen generation mode when the aircraft is in flight. For example, all SOFCs may operate in the power generation mode on the ground. However, in flight, some SOFCs are operated to provide power while other SOFCs are operated to provide oxygen. In this case, one or more SOFC stacks can be operated in the power generation mode while the remaining stack or stacks can be operated in the oxygen generation mode. Alternatively, one or more stacks may be dedicated to always operating in the power generation mode while another one or more stacks may be dedicated to always operating in the oxygen generation mode. In this case, the fuel cells that are dedicated to operating only in the power generation mode may contain non-reversible electrode materials, such as a Ni-YSZ anode cermet.
The SOFC mode of operation is controlled manually or automatically through control electronics, such as the cockpit control electronics 109 that are operated by the pilot, or by a computer or other general or dedicated logic device.
It should be noted that the aircraft 101 of the second embodiment may also contain the optional water transport 13 and heat transport 17 conduits described above with respect to the first embodiment. Furthermore, as described above, the aircraft may contain the distributed fuel cells of the first embodiment in combination with the oxygen generation mode of the second embodiment.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,854,688 is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. The foregoing description of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings or may be acquired from practice of the invention. The drawings are not necessarily to scale and illustrate the device in schematic block format. The drawings and description of the preferred embodiments were chosen in order to explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, and are not meant to be limiting on the scope of the claims. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto, and their equivalents.