| Fuel cells
designed to meet large power needs
Roller coaster gas prices and rising
energy costs for the home have created uneasiness about the future of our
fossil-fuel based economy. One near-term solution being pursued by researchers
at the Biodesign Institute at ASU is a new fuel cell technology for renewable
energy and the fledgling hydrogen economy.
Don Gervasio, associate research
professor at the institute's Center for Applied NanoBioscience, is overseeing
an ASU team that was awarded a $1.5 million grant by the Department of
Energy (DOE) to develop new fuel cell components to more efficiently generate
electrical power. The technology is designed for use in large fuel cells
that can generate 100 kilowatts of power, which is enough for a car, a
home or a remote power station.
Most power generators come with an
unwanted side effect: heat. For a car, excess heat is handled by running
coolant from the radiator through the engine block. To date, attempts to
use a similar cooling technology with most fuel cells have been unsuccessful.
"Even though a fuel cell operates
at a higher efficiency than a car engine, it still puts out a considerable
amount of heat," said Gervasio. "For a long time people thought that a
room temperature fuel cell would be ideal for automobiles, but it turns
out that if you power an automobile using a fuel cell operating at room
temperature, you need a radiator as big as the car."
Fuel Cell Sandwich
Fuel cells are generating significant
interest because they offer a more efficient alternative to heat engines
and avoid nasty pollutants like carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides and ozone.
A typical fuel cell is an elaborate
assembly of membranes sandwiched by electrodes and plates that send gases
into the fuel cell to generate electricity. According to the DOE, the membrane
and electrode parts of the fuel cell account for more than half of the
costs of the fuel cell stacks. A reduction in those costs would make the
fuel cell system more competitive with standard gasoline engines.
By designing a membrane that operates
at high temperatures (a medium oven setting of 250 F, or 120 C), Gervasio
and colleagues want to reduce both the amount of heat management needed
to operate the fuel cell and its overall size, weight and costs.
A hydrogen powered fuel cell has
positive and negative ends just like a battery. It works by splitting hydrogen
gas into its component protons and electrons at the negative electrode,
which react with oxygen from air at the positive electrode. This produces
electricity while leaving only water as a byproduct.
The 'cheese' of the fuel cell stack,
the fuel cell membrane, completes the electrical circuit by funneling protons
through the membrane from one electrode to the other. Just as importantly,
it also forces energized electrons to move across a circuit outside the
membrane, producing an electron current to power devices such as a light
bulb or electric motor.
Some commercial membrane designs
reduce the operating voltage generated from the fuel cell by as much as
50 percent of its theoretical value, and most don't operate at temperatures
much above room temperature, Gervasio said. This makes the development
of a new membrane essential if fuel cells are to be used to reduce consumption
of fossil fuels and have a central role in the hydrogen economy.
The Secret Sauce
Another aspect of the fuel cell membrane
that ASU scientists hope to improve is its source of electrolytes, the
salts that carry charge through the inside of the fuel cell. ASU Regents'
Professor Austen Angell, a co-leader of the group, has been using protic
ionic liquids to accelerate the movement of protons, which are essential
for completing the circuit and generating electric power.
Currently, high temperature fuel
cell systems use phosphoric acid in a polymer matrix as the membrane electrolyte,
but the voltage generated is about half what could theoretically be achieved.
One of the protic ionic liquids that Angell and his fellow researchers
have experimented with has generated electric potentials approaching the
theoretical limit, but has not yet been able to maintain the voltage at
higher currents.
Another advantage of protic ionic
liquids compared to the phosphoric acid system is that they don't contain
any water. Water, the only byproduct of generating energy from hydrogen
in a fuel cell, can often clog up the system and prevent the hydrogen and
oxygen gases from flowing into the cell.
One protic ionic mixture being tested
uses the combination of two ammonium salts, ammonium nitrate and ammonium
bisulfate. "These are some of the cheapest chemicals on the market, and
they work like a charm," said Angell.
Fashioning a water-free electrolyte
system is not without its difficulties. Individually, the ammonium salts
are solid at room temperature, like table salt. However, when the salts
are combined at just the right ratio, they can melt into a liquid at the
operating temperatures of the fuel cell, allowing incorporation into the
membrane.
A Real Pickle
Another co-leader of the project,
Jeff Yarger, professor of chemistry and biochemistry, is building an analytical
system using a powerful tool, NMR spectroscopy, to both troubleshoot fuel
cell development and help uncover the mechanisms of proton conduction across
the fuel cell membrane.
"The whole point of the membrane
is to get protons across as fast as possible," said Yarger. "If they are
getting stuck in the membrane we want to be able to see where they are
getting stuck and find a way to fix it."
Yarger and his team can measure how
quickly the protons move across the membrane, which will aid in membrane
design. "From a practical engineering perspective you'd want the membrane
to be as solid as possible, but from a proton diffusion perspective you
want the membrane to be as liquid as possible," said Yarger.
An assortment of different polymers
will be used to absorb the protic ionic liquids to find the best combination
of stability and conductivity. With continued optimization and a better
understanding of how the fuel cells work, the researchers hope to break
through the barriers that have limited widespread adoption of fuel cells.
Funding for the fuel cell project will continue until 2011.

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