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建立人际资源圈Fuel_Cell
2013-11-13 来源: 类别: 更多范文
| King Faisal University | |
| College of Engineering | |
| | |
Fuel Cell
Prepared by : Abdullah Salman Al-Bitar
Date: May 12,2012
Managing global energy supplies is increasingly becoming
Introduction ;
Managing global energy supplies is increasingly becoming a
key issue for the future of mankind. If present usage levels are
sustained, fossil energy resources created over several hundred
millions of years will be used up within just a few generations.
The future of energy supply lies in opening up renewable energy
sources and developing new technologies such as the fuel cell.
The fuel cell’s potential ;
For decades, the internal-combustion engine has been
a hallmark in the history of the automotive industry
and of stand-alone energy supply. To most users, it has
so far been the only appropriate solution to drive cars
or generate power at remote sites. Fuel cells offer, for the
first time, the chance to replace the combustion engine
in a number of applications and thereby avoid harmful
emissions.
For the energy industry, they open up the option of
sustainable, resource-saving supply, and – thanks to
their ecological soundness – many diverse applications.
This includes applications in the mobile sector and all
areas of the energy industry.
The fuel cell looks back on a long track record. As
early as 1839, an Englishman, Sir William Robert Grove
(1811 – 1896 ), constructed the first fuel cell. Its further
development proved such an arduous task that Grove’s
concept was only used in isolated applications for nearly
100 years. His fuel cells featured electrodes made of
platinum sitting in a glass tube with their lower end
immersed in dilute sulfuric acid as an electrolyte and
their upper part exposed to hydrogen and oxygen inside
the tube. This was sufficient to produce a voltage of
1 volt. To turn the fuel cell into a really efficient source
of power, substantial technical efforts had to be made.
Over 160 years have lapsed since the fuel cell was invented.
Its true potential as the energy converter of the
future has only recently manifested itself. Today, it is on
the point of commercial use.
Operating principle of the fuel cell ;
A proton exchange membrane is
coated with a thin platinum catalyzer
layer and a gas-permeable
electrode made of graphite paper.
Hydrogen fed to the anode side
ionizes into protons and electrons
at the catalyzer. The protons pass the
catalyzer layer, while the electrons
remaining behind give a negative
charge to the hydrogen-side electrode.
During the proton migration,
a voltage difference builds up between
the electrodes. When these
are connected, this difference produces
a direct current that can drive
an engine, for example. Finally, the
protons recombine with the electrons
and the oxygen into water at
the cathode.
Besides the recovered electric
energy, the only reaction product is
water. Additionally, heat is produced
by the electrochemical reactions and
the contact resistances in the fuel
cell, which can be used for space or
service water heating.
The voltage of a single non-operated
cell is about 1.23 V (volts). In
operation, this level falls to about
0.6 to 0.7 V under load. As this level
is too low for practical applications,
a sufficient number of cells is connected
in series to obtain a usable
voltage. They may add up to 800
cells in larger-sized plants.
The line-up of cells is equivalent
to a stack, and this word has become
a technical term generally used for
this arrangement.
It is characteristic of fuel cells that
they generate a DC voltage. To allow
practical use, it has to be transformed
into an AC signal. This is done by
downstream DC/AC converters.
Benefits of fuel cells ;
Fuel cells convert hydrogen and oxygen into
electric energy. At the same time, heat is produced
that lends itself to supplying process
heat, producing hot water and delivering heat
to buildings. If operated as co-generation units
(combined heat and power generation – CHP),
fuel cells reach energy conversion rates of up
to 80 percent and can therefore make a sustainable
contribution to energy saving.
Compared with conventional techniques,
the use of fuel cells holds additional promise.
This includes high efficiencies even where
plant capacity is small, constant efficiency
under part load, simple and modular design,
low maintenance expenses and a level of
hazardous substance emissions so low that it
cannot be achieved with any other technique.
As hydrogen is directly converted by electrochemical
reactions, the efficiency of fuel cells is
– unlike traditional energy conversion processes –
not limited. Fuel cells can therefore reach much
higher efficiencies than internal-combustion
engines.
Fuel cells are also effective under part load.
Unlike in conventional systems, the efficiency
remains largely constant until 50 percent full
load. This has merits for plants which are frequently
operated under part load (e.g. motor
vehicles in inner-city traffic).
Carbon dioxide emissions (CO2) result from
use of carbonaceous fuels. These include all
fossil energies such as coal, oil and natural gas.
As fuel cells will in the medium and long term
use fossil resources (natural gas) as an auxiliary
fuel, their use also leads to carbon dioxide
emissions. But thanks to combined heat and
power generation and the high efficiencies,
CO2 emissions will be lower than in conventional
systems.
Fuel cell types ;
1- Solid Oxide Fuel Cell (SOFC)
Solid oxide fuel cells are designed for use
in all areas of electricity supply. At working
temperatures up to 1000 °C, they have
potential for highly efficient energy supply.
In particular if combined with moderately
priced gas turbines, SOFC cells
can in future also be used to construct
small-scale generation plants with efficiencies
comparable to those of natural
gas fired combined-cycle power plants.
Mini-plants for residential and small commercial
applications are being developed
by Swiss Sulzer Hexis AG, and larger-sized
plants with capacities between 250 kW
(kilowatts) and 20 MW (megawatts) by
Siemens Westinghouse.
2- Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (MCFC)
Molten carbonate fuel cells working at
temperatures between 500 °C and 600 °C
are being developed for industrial applications.
They permit electricity generation
with high efficiencies (approx. 55
percent) and simultaneous production
of process steam, offering excellent
potential for industrial combined heat
and power generation. In Germany, a
prominent developer of this technology
is MTU, and in America, Fuel Cell Energy
is foremost.
3- Alkaline Fuel Cell (AFC)
Alkaline fuel cells are distinguished
by a combination of low working temperatures
and high efficiencies. They are
favored for niche applications in the
space industry or the maritime sector,
e. g. to drive submarines. The demands
this cell type makes on the purity of
hydrogen and oxygen clearly limit the
practical scope of use. This fuel cell type
is developed by ZeVco (Zero Emission
Vehicle Corporation) and others in
Germany; worldwide, IFC (International
Fuel Cell) and Fuji work on it.
4- Phosphoric Acid Fuel Cell (PAFC)
Opportunities for phosphoric acid fuel
cells working at temperatures around
200 °C are in combined heat and power
production. Administrative buildings,
hospitals, indoor pools but also large residential
estates are potential applications.
Over 180 plants supplied by American
manufacturers ONSI are operated worldwide
and have in part already been
decommissioned after reaching their
expected service life. They are proof of
the vast interest in using the fuel cell
technology. Still, experience with this
technique has given rise to some doubts
about its further success. They concern
the limited potential for saving manufacturing
costs, and technical restrictions
resulting from the need to constantly
maintain temperatures. Besides ONSI,
Japanese companies Fuji and Toshiba
work on this method.
5- Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell
(PEMFC)
Employing fuel cells in the end user market
is seen as a particularly interesting
opportunity. About 25 percent of primary
energy consumption in Germany are
accounted for by space heating and hot
water supply, so that use of fuel cells as
CHP plants would contribute to energy
saving. That temperature levels are relatively
low in the supply of hot water for
space and service water heating opens
up a range of applications for low temperature
cells with proton exchange
membranes.
PEM fuel cells are used in the Berlin
demonstration project. With an electric
power output of 250 k Wel , this is their first
commercial-scale application in Europe.
The success of this project will be an
important prerequisite for marketing
planned from 2004 onwards.
# The future’s name is hydrogen.
Making hydrogen available ;
Industrial sources are, for example, chemical
industry operations. The excess
H2 produced in synthesis gas manufacture
has already found its way into the
energy supply sector, and can in future
be used more widely. The same applies
to electric energy that is freely available
in low-load periods. Electrolyzer
outfits can be employed to produce
hydrogen out of it and use it in peak
load periods to cover electricity needs
or supply vehicles with H2.
Recovering hydrogen from renewable
energies is today still seen as a future
option. Economic reasons will continue
to reduce it to niche applications for
some time. Fossil energy sources such
as natural gas and mineral oil appear
to be the most promising sources for
hydrogen production in the medium
term. This requires treatment – so called
reformation – processes to be
installed upstream of the fuel cell.
Hydrogen production through
Reformation ;
Reformation is a multi-stage process transforming
hydrogen-containing energy
sources into hydrogen-rich gases. As this
process consumes energy, it results in
drawbacks to the energetic overall efficiency
of a fuel cell process.
In a first step, natural gas is split in a
reformation reaction into a gas mix consisting
of three parts hydrogen (H2) and
one part carbon monoxide (CO). In addition
to process heat (+205.8 kJ/mol, i.e.
kilojoules per mol), this requires feeding
of water vapor as a co reactant. In a second
step, the remaining CO is, with the
help of steam, oxidized to carbon dioxide
(CO2) in a shift reaction. It releases a further
free hydrogen molecule. The final
product is a gas mix consisting of four
parts H2 and one part CO2 which can be
directly used in the fuel cell.
The shift reaction is exothermic, i.e.
connected with a release of energy
(–42.3 kJ/mol). This energy can be employed
to partly cover the energy demand of reformation.
PEM fuel cells are normally highly
sensitive to CO contained in the fuel gas.
Carbon monoxide is regarded as a catalyzer
poison. These fuel cells therefore necessitate
removing residual CO in a third or
even fourth treatment stage, which is
done in a process called selective oxidation.
The entire gas treatment process involves
a 20 to 30 percent loss of energy,
which detracts from the efficiency of the
fuel cell process. Losses are lower when
high-temperature fuel cells are used.
They permit internal reformation of the
fuel inside the fuel cell, which leads to
hardware savings and efficiency advantages.
But the price paid for these benefits
is that expensive materials with high
temperature resistance have to be used.
State of the art ;
Fuel cells have reached a maturity today
that allows building complete plants in
commercially usable sizes. They serve as
demonstration units for their manufacturers
to test and optimize their plant
configurations, and help their operators
– mainly energy utilities – gain initial experience
with this new technology. This
is also the purpose of the Berlin fuel cell
project. Demonstration projects should
not be confused with commercial fuel cell
applications. This needs further years of
development and operating experience.
With a view to mobile applications, this
means in particular that a decision has
to be made which energy resource will in
future be needed – either hydrogen is
directly used, or methanol serves as an
intermediate solution. For stationary
applications, efficient and compact
reformers will have to be developed that
allow low-cost conversion of natural gas
into hydrogen-rich gas.
Many companies have committed to
working intensively on development.
Even well-renowned manufacturers nevertheless
assume that both mobile and
stationary serial products will not be
commercially available until after 2004.
#A variety of applications.
Simple and low-cost ;
A fluorine-containing foil, vaporized with a catalytic
precious metal and coated with a gas-permeable
electrode made of graphite paper, is enclosed by two
bipolar plates made of metal or graphite. Grooves
milled or pressed into the plates allow feeding of
hydrogen and oxygen or air to the anode and cathode.
The simple design of the PEM fuel cell suggests that
manufacture will in future be low-cost, permitting
mass production as usual e. g. in the automotive
industry.
Merits of PEM fuel cells
PEM fuel cells outperform competing technologies
in a number of ways that speak in favor of their good
marketing potential. The following aspects are core
to its superiority:
#PEM fuel cells are appropriate for mobile and stationary
use. Their versatility in application suggests
synergies, with cost benefits lying with stationary
applications.
#PEM fuel cells have the highest power density compared
with competing technologies, with potential
for further development. This allows building small,
space-saving systems as required for remote-site
applications.
#PEM fuel cell applications in power supply range
from mini-systems generating a few watts via standalone
units in combined heat and power to applications
in stand-by power supply – a universally usable
technology.

