Artigo Revisado por pares

A microstructure-oriented mathematical model of a direct internal reforming solid oxide fuel cell

2020; Elsevier BV; Volume: 213; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.enconman.2020.112826

ISSN

1879-2227

Autores

Grzegorz Brus, Piotr F. Raczkowski, Masashi Kishimoto, Hiroshi Iwai, Janusz S. Szmyd,

Tópico(s)

Electrocatalysts for Energy Conversion

Resumo

A standard fuel cell requires hydrogen for operation; however, to achieve near-term applications fuel cells need to use the existing infrastructure and already available fuels such as methane. In this respect, solid oxide fuel cells are promising candidates for distributed stationary power generation. However, feeding methane directly into the anode is liable to carbon deposition at low temperatures or to cause thermal stress due to the endothermic steam-methane reforming reaction at high temperatures. Because of these drawbacks, direct chemical conversion of methane on the Ni-based anode has not been realized in practical applications so far. Therefore, numerical modeling plays a vital role to optimize the anode and thereby assure the safe operating condition of the direct reforming process. This paper presents experimental and numerical studies on the direct internal reforming solid oxide fuel cell. A microstructure-orientated mathematical model of micro-scale transport phenomena, chemical and electrochemical reactions in an anode-supported solid oxide fuel cell is developed. The model divides a cell-assembly into six computational subdomains to bypass typical numerical artifacts and assure a realistic charge-transfer distribution in the electrodes. The proposed novel mathematical model positively passed verification with the comparison of the calculated current-voltage characteristics with the experimental ones.

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