Ambient reactants fuel cells
11355772 · 2022-06-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01M8/16
ELECTRICITY
H01M8/04201
ELECTRICITY
H01M8/22
ELECTRICITY
H01M2250/00
ELECTRICITY
Y02E60/50
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
H01M8/22
ELECTRICITY
H01M8/04082
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Devices powered by fuel cells can be operated for extended durations when the fuel cells are adapted to extract the necessary reactants for generating power from the surrounding environment and when the concentration of reactants in that environment is maintained at a sufficient level by interaction between the environment and a reactant-enriched atmosphere.
Claims
1. A fuel cell for powering a device operating in an environment, comprising: a reaction cell having an anode and a cathode and configured to generate electrical energy by reacting fuel received at said anode with oxidizer received at said cathode; a fuel-extracting element exposed to the surrounding environment and configured to extract fuel from the surrounding environment so as to be available to said anode; an oxidizer-extracting element exposed to the same surrounding environment as said fuel-extracting element and configured to extract oxidizer from the surrounding environment so as to be available to said cathode; and at least one reactant storage tank connectable to provide a reactant to one of said anode and said cathode when concentration of the associated reactant in the environment is insufficient for the reaction cell to generate sufficient electrical energy to power the device.
2. The fuel cell of claim 1 wherein said reaction cell employs a catalyst to facilitate an oxidation reaction at said anode.
3. The fuel cell of claim 2 wherein said catalyst is selected from the group of: metals; and doped carbon nanotubes.
4. The fuel cell of claim 1 wherein said fuel-extracting element and said oxidizer-extracting element are configured to respectively extract fuel and oxidizer from a gaseous environment.
5. The fuel cell of claim 1 wherein said fuel-extracting element and said oxidizer-extracting element are configured to respectively extract fuel and oxidizer from a liquid environment.
6. The fuel cell of claim 1 wherein said fuel-extracting element and said oxidizer-extracting element are provided by selectively-permeable membranes.
7. The fuel cell of claim 1 wherein said at least one reactant storage tank includes a reactant storage tank that is connectable to said anode to provide fuel thereto.
8. The fuel cell of claim 1 wherein said at least one reactant storage tank includes a reactant storage tank that is connectable to said cathode to provide oxidizer thereto.
9. A device for operating in an environment, comprising: circuitry housed in said device; a fuel cell housed in said device and having, a reaction cell having an anode and a cathode and configured to generate electrical energy for said circuitry by reacting fuel received at said anode with oxidizer received at said cathode, a fuel-extracting element exposed to the surrounding environment and configured to extract fuel from the surrounding environment so as to be available to said anode, and an oxidizer-extracting element exposed to the same surrounding environment as said fuel-extracting element and configured to extract oxidizer from the surrounding environment so as to be available to said cathode; and at least one reactant storage tank housed in the device and connectable to provide a reactant to one of said anode and said cathode when concentration of the associated reactant in the environment is insufficient for the reaction cell to generate sufficient electrical energy to power the device.
10. The device of claim 9 wherein said reaction cell employs a catalyst to facilitate an oxidation reaction at said anode.
11. The device of claim 10 wherein said catalyst is selected from the group of: metals; and doped carbon nanotubes.
12. The device of claim 9 wherein said fuel-extracting element and said oxidizer-extracting element are configured to respectively extract fuel and oxidizer from a gaseous environment.
13. The device of claim 9 wherein said fuel-extracting element and said oxidizer-extracting element are configured to respectively extract fuel and oxidizer from a liquid environment.
14. The device of claim 9 wherein said fuel-extracting element and said oxidizer-extracting element are provided by selectively-permeable membranes.
15. The device of claim 9 wherein said at least one reactant storage tank includes a reactant storage tank that is connectable to said anode of said fuel cell to provide fuel thereto.
16. The device of claim 9 wherein said at least one reactant storage tank includes a reactant storage tank that is connectable to said cathode of said fuel cell to provide oxidizer thereto.
17. A fuel cell for powering a device operating in an environment containing fuel and oxidizer, comprising: a reaction cell having an anode and a cathode and configured to generate electrical energy by reacting fuel received at said anode with oxidizer received at said cathode, wherein said reaction cell is designed to react acetylene; a fuel-extracting element exposed to the fuel and oxidizer-containing environment and configured to extract acetylene fuel from the surrounding environment so as to be available to said anode; and an oxidizer-extracting element exposed to the fuel and oxidizer-containing environment as said fuel-extracting element and configured to extract oxidizer from the surrounding environment so as to be available to said cathode.
18. The fuel cell of claim 17 wherein said reaction cell employs a catalyst to facilitate an oxidation reaction at said anode.
19. The fuel cell of claim 18 wherein said catalyst is selected from the group of: metals; and doped carbon nanotubes.
20. A fuel cell for powering a device operating in an environment, comprising: a reaction cell having an anode and a cathode and configured to generate electrical energy by reacting fuel received at said anode with oxidizer received at said cathode; a fuel-extracting element exposed to the surrounding environment and configured to extract fuel from the surrounding environment so as to be available to said anode, wherein said fuel-extracting element is provided by at least one sorting rotor; and an oxidizer-extracting element exposed to the same surrounding environment as said fuel-extracting element and configured to extract oxidizer from the surrounding environment so as to be available to said cathode.
21. A device for operating in an environment, comprising: circuitry housed in said device; and a fuel cell housed in said device and having, a reaction cell having an anode and a cathode and configured to generate electrical energy for said circuitry by reacting fuel received at said anode with oxidizer received at said cathode, a fuel-extracting element exposed to the surrounding environment and configured to extract fuel from the surrounding environment so as to be available to said anode, wherein said fuel-extracting element is provided by at least one sorting rotor, and an oxidizer-extracting element exposed to the same surrounding environment as said fuel-extracting element and configured to extract oxidizer from the surrounding environment so as to be available to said cathode.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF FIGURES
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) Method
(7)
(8) Once provided 102 with the adapted fuel cell, the device is then placed 104 into an operating environment, which in this example is assumed to be a body of a liquid in which the device containing the fuel cell is to operate (such as illustrated in
(9) The level of fuel is optionally measured 108 to determine whether there is enough to operate the device, and if necessary, additional fuel is added 110. Depending on the situation, the fuel could be added by replacing existing gas in the enriched atmosphere with fuel, or by simply adding fuel to the existing gas. The measurement step 108 may not be needed, such as in cases where various parameters, such as the gas solubility and diffusion constant are known, as is the effectiveness of a given system of aeration, gas exchange, or the like, if present, so that it can be assumed that adding fuel at a given rate or in a given amount raises the concentration to a suitable level without having to measure it. If the fuel consumption by the fuel cell is significant, such as when large numbers of devices are employed, the fuel consumption rate should be factored into the calculations.
(10) When it is determined that a sufficient fuel concentration exists, then the device is operated 112. If the fuel consumption of the device (or multiple devices) relative to the amount of environmental fuel available makes it likely that fuel depletion is a concern, then the fuel continues to the measured 108 (optionally—as noted, calculations could estimate the fuel consumption and allow adding additional fuel based on such calculations without measurement) and more fuel added 110 as needed. Note that operating the device can also mean changing its power usage and hence, fuel consumption. The device need not be only “on” or “off”, rather, it may engage in whatever activity the available fuel levels permit (such as entering a “sleep” or “standby” mode if fuel levels are low).
(11) In addition to fuel, the fuel cell in this example uses oxygen, and thus a sufficient supply of oxygen is needed. Since air on Earth is 21% oxygen, oxygen is readily available in many situations and thus may not need to be added when air is used as the basis for forming the enriched atmosphere. As mentioned herein, oxygen, or any other oxidizer of use, may also be enriched. However, excessive levels of oxygen may create hazards (because the fuel/oxygen mix has the potential to be flammable or explosive, as discussed herein). Thus, the level of oxygen may need to be regulated. In such cases, the oxygen concentration is measured 114 to determine whether it falls within a specified range. If not, then the oxygen level is regulated 116 to bring it within range. Such regulation can be done by introducing more air into the enriched atmosphere, directly adding oxygen from a source, or other techniques well known in the art of regulating gas mixtures.
(12) As noted herein, above certain concentrations of fuel and oxygen, the mixture can be flammable, or explosive, and thus appropriate precautions to avoid sources of ignition such as sparks may be needed. For hydrogen fuel, a concentration of hydrogen above 4% is flammable or explosive where sufficient oxygen is available. Hydrogen concentrations over 75% are not considered flame or explosion hazards though; such mixtures being considered too rich to burn. For acetylene fuel, the risk of fire or explosion occurs at concentrations above 2.5%. Unlike hydrogen, there is no upper limit above which acetylene will not burn or explode. However, these figures should be taken as empirically derived guidelines only. The exact concentrations which do or do not pose a hazard can vary depending on temperature, pressure, and other factors. Those skilled in the relevant arts will appreciate that the safety precautions to be taken, and testing conducted to determine the risks of a given system, are well-known.
(13) Apparatus
(14)
(15) The atmosphere 216 is maintained by a gas regulator 220, which communicates with the interior of the enclosure 206 and with a source of hydrogen such as compressed fuel tank 222 (while hydrogen is assumed in the present description, acetylene or other appropriate fuel gas could be employed). The gas regulator 220 illustrated can also draw in air via an air intake 224, although oxygen could be supplied from a pressurized tank or other source. The gas regulator 220 may monitor the gas composition of the enriched atmosphere 216 and adjust the concentration by adding more hydrogen and/or air/oxygen to maintain the desired composition to supply a sufficient concentration of dissolved hydrogen and oxygen in the liquid operating environment 204. If the enclosure 206 can sustain a pressure elevated above the ambient pressure, the gas regulator 220 could provide such an elevated pressure for the enriched atmosphere 216. Optionally, aeration or some other process could be used to increase the speed of the gas exchange of enriched atmosphere 216 with the liquid environment 204; for example, the gas mixture could be delivered into the enclosure 206 below the surface of the liquid 204 (as indicated by the supply line shown in dashed lines) such that the gas mixture bubbles through the liquid 204. Note that hydrogen oxidizes to form water, so where the liquid 204 is water or mostly water, there would likely be no need to remove the fuel cell “waste” when using hydrogen fuel. However, acetylene produces water and carbon dioxide. Other fuels also produce waste products which might preferably be removed. In such cases, the gas regulator 220 and air intake 224 could be adapted to also serve as an exhaust port; alternatively, a separate mechanism could be added to perform the task of removing waste products.
(16)
(17)
(18) Fuel-extraction element 270 shown in
(19)
(20) While storage of reactants is shown in
(21) Medical Applications
(22) One area of particular interest is in powering small robotic devices for use in medical tasks.
(23) While various fuels could be employed, the system 400 illustrated is designed to employ hydrogen as the fuel. Since the concentration of hydrogen in air is insufficient to power the devices 402, additional hydrogen is made available. This can be accomplished by placing the organism 404 within a sealed enclosure 406 with a gas composition regulated by gas regulator 408. Gas regulator 408 adds hydrogen, from a hydrogen supply tank 410, and optionally oxygen, from an oxygen tank 412, providing an enriched atmosphere 414 within the enclosure 406 that has the proper proportions of hydrogen and oxygen to both adequately fuel the devices 402 (in situations where a different fuel and/or oxidizer is employed, appropriate supplies of such reactant(s) would replace the reactant tanks 410/412). To maintain the enriched atmosphere 414, the gas regulator 408 could perform the measuring and adjusting steps (108, 110, 114, & 116) shown in
(24)
(25) Gas Concentrations and Safety
(26) Oxygen normally occurs in air at a proportion of 21%. Note however, that it is routine to use higher concentrations of oxygen (up to 100%, or even effectively higher if pressure is increased) for, for example, patients undergoing anesthesia or for specific underwater diving purposes. There can be risks associated with the inhalation of high levels of oxygen, however, there are also studies that claim, for example, pure O2 used in an operating room setting is not only not harmful, but actual reduces certain risks associated with surgery. So, in a medical setting, care should be used to test the safety of a particular protocol involving levels or percentages of oxygen that vary substantially from that found in normal air. Also note that oxygen can be used for breathing in significantly lower concentrations than 21% when pressures are high enough (e.g., Hydreliox and Hydrox).
(27) Hydrogen has been used in gas mixes for breathing at high concentrations and there is no known concentration that has been found directly harmful. The primary danger associated with hydrogen is that it becomes potentially explosive in the presence of oxygen at concentrations above about 4%. Presumably because of the explosion risk, previous use of hydrogen for inhalation has been done in a low-oxygen environment, such as with high-pressure deep diving gas mixes including Hydreliox (49% H, 50.2% He, & 0.8% O), and Hydrox (96% H, 4% O). (James H. Dougherty, “The Use of Hydrogen as an Inert Gas During Diving: Pulmonary Function During Hydrogen-Oxygen Breathing at Pressures Equivalent to 200 Feet of Sea Water,” 801, 1974; Gerard, Comet et al., “LONG TERM HYDROGEN SATURATION DIVE_HYDRA IX,” Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society, Inc. Joint Annual Scientific Meeting with the International Congress for Hyperbaric Medicine and the European Undersea Biomedical Society, Amsterdam, N L, 1990) Very low percentages of O2 can be employed in such cases to avoid the risk of explosion, when the pressure is high enough that the total amount of O2 is still sufficient for respiration or other metabolic processes. Assumedly due to the risk of fire or explosion, the inventor is not aware of any literature that uses concentrations of H2>4%, and concentrations of O2>4%, at the same time.
(28) Acetylene has been used in breathing mixes. Acetylene is a non-toxic gas that has no chronic harmful effects even in high concentrations. Acetylene has been used as an anesthetic in concentrations up to 70%, although lower concentrations (e.g. 33-35%) will also cause unconsciousness eventually (5-7 minutes, respectively). Inhalation of 10% acetylene for 1 hour is not known to have any adverse effects. For Acetylene, there is a fire/explosion risk in the presence of oxygen when the concentration of acetylene gets above about 2.5%.
(29) Other anesthetic gasses also show promise as possible fuel sources to power devices used for medical functions. Ethylene has been used as an anesthetic (at concentrations of 80% ethylene and 20% oxygen, lower concentrations of ethylene do not necessarily result in anesthesia), as has cyclopropane (at 3-40%), methoxypropane (methyl propyl ether), and diethyl ether (at 3-15%), among other gasses. All these gasses are flammable or explosive under certain conditions (which generally overlap with their medical concentrations), but are otherwise relatively safe from a medical perspective when used at the appropriate concentrations. The fact that they are flammable is a good indication that they could be useful as a fuel, since their oxidation releases substantial energy. In fact, in addition to H2, at least acetylene and dimethyl ether have been used in fuel cells. (Cearnaigh, Dumont et al., “High-Performance Direct Dimethyl Ether Fuel Cell Operating with an Advanced Activation Process,” 228th ECS Meeting, Phoenix, Ariz., US, 2015)
(30) Gas Solubility
(31) Henry's Law states that the amount of dissolved gas in a liquid is proportional to its partial pressure in the gas phase. The proportionality constant (Henry's Constant, or kH) depends on the solubility of the gas in the liquid. These relationships can be stated as:
(32) TABLE-US-00001 [gas(aqueous)] = solubility (α) * partial pressure (P) Eq. 1
and
(33) TABLE-US-00002 kH = [gas(aqueous)]/partial pressure (P) Eq. 2
(34) In considering the total amount of power that fuels cells could provide to devices in a medical context, another consideration is the diffusion constant of the fuel. While the solubility or Henry constant can address fuel concentrations at equilibrium, the fuel cells will be using both fuel and oxidizer, and so will deplete the reactants from their immediate surroundings. This creates a gradient, where the higher concentration coming from the enriched atmosphere replenishes the reactants used by the fuel cells. How fast this gradient can replenish the supply depends in part on the diffusion constant of the fuel. Diffusion would be limiting over substantial distances in the absence of convection. However, convection is present in most biological systems, from the cardiovascular system of animals, to mechanical agitation of media in cell culture. Thus, the distances over which diffusion must act become very small, making solubility a more important factor.
(35) The Henry constants and diffusion constants (where available) for several potential fuel gasses follow. Water is used as a proxy for blood or other tissues.
(36) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 1 Henry Constants and Diffusion Constants for Various Gasses in Water Diffusion Constant × Solubility 10.sup.−5 cm2/s Gas Henry Constant Relative to O2 (at 25 C.) C2H2 (acetylene) 0.04 mol/L * atm 30.7X 1.99 C2H4 (ethylene) 0.0047 mol/L * atm 3.6X 1.87 Cyclopropane 0.011 mol/L * atm 8.5X Diethyl ether 0.78 mol/L * atm 600X 0.88-0.93 H2 (hydrogen) 0.00078 mol/L * atm 0.6X 4.5-5.11 Methyl propyl ether 0.68 mol/L * atm 523X O2 (oxygen) 0.0013 mol/L * atm 1X 2.0-2.42
Gas Content of Tissues when Breathing Enriched Atmosphere
(37) The Henry constants in water (which is used as a proxy for blood) for many of the exemplary gasses listed herein are higher, in some cases far higher, than that of O2. All other things being equal, that would indicate that, if the atmosphere was enriched with one of these gasses at percentages comparable to the O2 present, the concentrations of these gasses in aqueous systems would be several times higher than that of O2 (with the exception of H2, which has a lower Henry constant than water). This would be true for many aqueous systems, even biological ones, but not completely accurate where blood is concerned. This is because blood contains heme, which allows it to bind much more oxygen than would be soluble in plain water.
(38) In blood, due to heme's oxygen carrying capability, and its dissociation curve (heme releases more O2 into the blood as the blood plasma levels of O2 decrease), O2's partial pressure is higher than would be expected based on the data for water. However, since much of the O2 is bound to heme, the partial pressure of O2 in plasma is not as much higher as might be expected given heme's O2 carrying ability. Rather, perhaps the biggest difference that heme causes is to help offset the gradient caused by metabolic usage of O2 via the gradual release of O2 as blood travels from the arterial to the venous side of the circulatory system.
(39) It should be noted that many conventionally-used measures of blood O2, such as when measuring in terms of ml of O2 per liter of blood, or oxygen saturation (which is a measure of the percentage of heme binding sites that contain O2), are not particularly useful for purposes of determining available oxygen for powering devices, as they do not describe the concentration of soluble O2. Molar concentration in plasma is a more useful unit so that available moles of O2 can be compared to available moles of H2 for reaction.
(40) For water at 37 C, assuming air (21% O2) is in contact with the water, dissolved O2 is about 6.5-7.6 mg/l. (“Air Solubility in Water,” Engineering ToolBox, Engineering ToolBox, 2004); (“TWRI Book 9,” U.S. Geological Survey, 1998); (Vendruscolo, Rossi et al., “Determination of Oxygen Solubility in Liquid Media,” ISRN Chemical Engineering, 2012) At 6.5 mg/l, since O2's molecular weight is ˜32 g/mol, this is a concentration of:
(41) TABLE-US-00004 0.0065 g/l/ 32 g/mol = 2 × 10.sup.−4 M = 200 uM Eq. 3
In blood, when heme is 75% saturated (venous blood), the oxygen concentration in plasma, CP, is 0.053 mM=530 uM. Expressed as partial pressure:
(42) TABLE-US-00005 PO2 = CP/α; PO2 = 0.053/1.3 × 10.sup.−3 ~= 41 mmHg Eq. 4
Arterial blood plasma has PO2˜=100 mmHg=1,325 uM=1.325×10.sup.−3 M.
(43) Even though blood can carry far more O2 than water can, its carrying capacity does not result in a linear increase in CP because about 98% of the O2 in blood is reversibly bound to heme. (Pittman, “Oxygen Transport,” Regulation of Tissue Oxygenation, San Rafael, Calif., US, Morgan & Claypool Life Sciences, 2011) The dramatic difference between total O2 and plasma (dissolved) O2 can be seen in the graph of
(44) The discussion of partial pressure of O2 in blood is informative for operation of devices in blood or similar fluids. However, PO2 values vary significantly from tissue to tissue. Table 2 lists typical PO2 values for several tissue examples. (Carreau, El Hafny-Rahbi et al., “Why is the partial oxygen pressure of human tissues a crucial parameter? Small molecules and hypoxia,” J Cell Mol Med, 6, 2011)
(45) TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 2 PO2 (% in micro- Environment PO2 (mmHg) environment) Air (reference) 160 mmHg 21.1% Blood, arterial 100 mmHg 13.2% Blood, venous 40 mmHg 5.3% Bone marrow 49 mmHg 6.4% Brain 34 mmHg 4.4% Cell 9.9-19 mmHg 1.3-2.5% Liver 40 mmHg 5.4% Lung 42.8 mmHg 5.6% Kidney Humans: 72 mmHg cortex 9.5% (for human cortex) Animal studies: 10-20 mmHg medulla 50 mmHg cortex Mitochondria <9.9 mmHg <1.3% Muscle 29 mmHg 3.8% Skin (dermal 24 mmHg 3.2% papillae) Skin (superficial) 8 mmHg 1.1%
(46) From the data herein, it can be seen that H2 is 60% as soluble in water as O2, while acetylene is almost 31 times as soluble in water as O2, and several other gasses are also much more soluble in water than O2. However, in blood and other tissue, both heme (which locally increases O2 concentration) and metabolism (which locally decreases O2 concentration) affect the concentrations of O2, which range from a high of 13.2% in arterial blood, to a low of 1.1% in superficial skin.
(47) Since, for the current example, the assumption is that O2 is going to be used to oxidize the fuel, the broad range of O2 levels in different tissues, coupled with the amount of fuel enrichment of the atmosphere, the pressure of the atmosphere, the solubility of the fuel in water/blood, and other factors, will affect how much power can be generated by a fuel cell. In some situations, a fuel cell will be fuel-limited, while in others, it will be oxygen-limited. Different fuels also release different amounts of energy when oxidized.
(48) Levels of H2 Required to Fully Utilize O2
(49) To provide basic exemplary calculations to determine when a fuel cell is fuel-limited, and when it is oxygen-limited, and how much power it can generate under various scenarios, H2 is used as an exemplary fuel. Similar calculations for other fuels should be apparent to one skilled in the art.
(50) The reaction to oxidize H2 is:
(51) TABLE-US-00007 H2 + 1/2 O2 .fwdarw. H2O Eq. 5
Thus, twice as many moles of hydrogen are needed than of oxygen.
(52) The O2 levels of venous blood (5.3%, or 530 um) seem reasonably representative of a mammalian body as a whole. They are substantially lower than arterial blood and at least parts of the kidney, but higher than muscle and skin, and about the same as brain, liver and lung. In designing fuel cells for powering devices operating in medical situations, one must decide whether to design for operation in high, average, or the limiting O2 levels such as those found in superficial skin (1.1%) and intracellular environments (1.3-2.5%). If operation is to be confined to a particular environment inside an organism, the O2 level in that environment can be used, but for a more general-purpose fuel cell, performance should be considered for utility in a variety of different O2 levels.
(53) As noted herein, venous blood has PO2=40 mmHg=5.3%=530 uM=5.3E-4 M. Since 5.3% O2=5.3E-4M, one can use a conversion factor:
(54) TABLE-US-00008 O2% = O2 M * 10000 Eq. 6 Or, rearranging: O2 M = O2%/10000
And, given that per H2's Henry constant, water in contact with 100% H2 would, at equilibrium, result in a concentration of 7.8E-4 M, one can determine the percentage of H2 (ignoring any gradient that may be created by oxidizing the H2) that a subject would have to inhale to be able to fully oxidize a given percentage of O2 using the formula:
(55) TABLE-US-00009 H2% = (2M O2/1M H2) *100 * ((O2%)/10000)/7.8E−4M Eq. 7
(56) A table of values based on the above formula follows. Note that the ranges are only exemplary and could certainly be lower or higher than listed in the table. Note that H2 percentages over ˜79% are impossible to achieve at 1 atm if ˜21% O2 must be present to maintain normal physiological function (this is not always the case, and clearly not the case in non-biological settings). Numbers over 100% would require higher pressures to achieve, and all numbers are written with respect to 1 atm. So, for example, an atmosphere of pure H2 at 2 atm would be considered 200% H2.
(57) TABLE-US-00010 TABLE 3 O2% in tissue [O2] (uM) Inhalation H2% to oxidize O2 @ 1 atm 1 100 25.6 2 200 51.3 3 300 76.9 4 400 102.6 5 500 128.2 6 600 153.8 7 700 179.5 8 800 205.1 9 900 230.8 10 1,000 256.4
(58) Since 79% hydrogen is the most the atmosphere can be enriched at 1 atm and still leave room for 21% O2, at this O2 level the highest H2 levels attainable under normal pressure would be enough to oxidize just over 3% O2. So, breathing a mixture of 21% O2 and 79% H2 would allow devices to be O2 limited in some tissues, but most tissues have an O2 content of about 3.8-5.6%, and so at 1 atm, a fuel cell would be H2 limited.
(59) Using a hyperbaric chamber (in which is included any apparatus that serves to increase pressure over that of the local ambient pressure) to contain the reactant-enriched atmosphere (such as the chamber 206 shown in
(60) Note that using all the O2 in a tissue to power fuel cells would initially seem to be ill-advised, since it would result in there being no O2 left for the tissue's metabolism. However, a device using O2 to generate power from H2 is little different than, e.g., muscles using O2 to generate ATP and other metabolic products during exercise. The body would compensate, increasing heart rate and the rate of respiration, to provide additional oxygen. An average human can easily double their resting metabolism with only modest activity. Vigorous exercise can increase the metabolic use of O2 by about 4× to 18×, and even higher for very brief periods of time (e.g., sprinting).
(61) Doubling O2 consumption is analogous to the situation where one or more fuel cells uses all the O2 that would normally be present at rest, and so the body must import twice as much oxygen to support both the fuel cells and baseline metabolism. Obviously, this level of activity could likely be maintained by a healthy person essentially indefinitely.
(62) Fuel Cell Energy Output
(63) The literature is sometimes unclear, when referring to kJ/mol, as to “Moles of what—fuel or oxidizer?” Since many fuel cells, including a hydrogen fuel cell, do not use a 1:1 fuel:oxidizer ratio, this is an important distinction and careful attention has to be paid to the reaction coefficients.
(64) For a hydrogen fuel cell, the reaction is:
H2+½O2.fwdarw.H2O+237 kJ/mol
(Nave, “Electrolysis of Water and Fuel Cell Operation,” Atlanta, Ga., US, Department of Physics & Astronomy, Georgia State university, 2001) Note that the energy is sometimes listed as 286 kJ/mol, but this is only for enthalpy, without accounting for entropy.
(65) For comparison purposes, a glucose fuel cell (which we use for exemplary purposes since it is another type of fuel cell considered for medical applications), when catalyzed by glucose oxidase, the reaction is:
C6H12O6+½O2.fwdarw.C6H10O6+H2O+100 kJ/mol
(Rubin and Mor, “Physical Modeling of the Enzymatic Glucose-Fuelled Fuel Cells,” Advances in Chemical Engineering and Science, 04, 2013).
(66) Given the reaction energies above, oxidation of H2 yields about 237 kJ/mol/100 kJ/mol˜=2.37 times as much energy as glucose oxidase catalyzed oxidation of glucose, using the same amount of oxygen. Another way to view this is that a hydrogen fuel cell can provide the same amount of power as a glucose fuel cell using only 42% as much oxygen.
(67) This means that, assuming both types of fuel cells are oxygen-limited, an H2 fuel cell operating in 3% O2 can produce as much power as a glucose fuel cell operating in 7% O2. Other than arterial blood and part of the kidney (the cortex), all tissues that have been reviewed have an O2 content <7%, indicating that except in these two tissues, a hydrogen fuel cell would provide more power than a glucose fuel cell. And, even in those tissues, a hydrogen fuel cell provides either more power, or uses less oxygen, or a combination somewhere in between.
(68) A simple glucose fuel cell only performs the first step of glucose oxidation. Many organisms, humans included, oxidize glucose more completely and efficiently. Humans, for example, generate about 20 kJ/liter O2 consumed, or 448 kJ/mol. By comparison, a hydrogen fuel cell using 1 mole of O2 (requiring 2 moles H2), would product 474 kJ/mol. However, fuel cells are not 100% efficient. Assuming an efficiency of 90%, a hydrogen fuel cell produces about 95% as much power as the human body would from the same amount of O2.
(69) The human body uses about 100 watts of power at rest, while consuming about 0.3 liters O2/min. Vigorous physical activity can use many times that amount of energy. For example, professional bicycle racers may consume over 1800 watts, while consuming over 5 liters O2/min. (Urone, Hinrichs et al., “Work, Energy, and Power in Humans,” OpenStax, 2019)
(70) If the human body uses about 100 watts at rest, and hydrogen fuel cells produce about 95% as much power from the same amount of O2, that leads to the conclusion that fuel cells could produce about 95 watts of power while consuming the same amount of oxygen that a human consumes at rest. Of course, in the case where the fuel cells are operating inside the human body, the human would then need to double their oxygen intake to account for both their basal metabolism and the O2 consumed by the fuel cells. This is a very modest increase in metabolism. Trained athletes can use up to about 18 times their basal oxygen consumption for extended periods of time. Most fit people could at least triple their basal oxygen consumption for extended periods of time. So, 95 watts actually represents a lower threshold of O2 that could be made available to fuel cells within the body. A fit, healthy person could likely sustain a 95 watt fuel cell load for extended, or even indefinite, periods of time, and much more than that for shorter periods of time.
(71) Obviously, the same type of calculations can be applied to acetylene, ethylene, cyclopropane, and all the other exemplary fuel gasses discussed herein, and all those that would be obvious based on appropriate parameters for energy released when oxidized, safety, toxicity, solubility, and to a lesser extent (since in a medical scenario a circulatory system actively brings the blood to within very small distances of most, if not all, tissues), diffusion rate.
(72) Note that vastly differing concentrations or amounts of fuel and oxidizer may be appropriate for different scenarios. Due to this, sufficiency or insufficiency of reactant levels is not readily expressed in concentrations or amounts. For example, herein we show that, to a first approximation, in a medical context about 95 Watts (or more) could be provided to devices via hydrogen fuel cells. That amount of power might be needed by a large device, for example, VADs, or “ventricular assist devices” can consume dozens of Watts. Alternatively, substantial power may be required because multiple smaller devices are being powered. On the other hand, there are also devices, such as biosensors, that only consume microwatts. (Bocan and Sejdic, “Adaptive Subcutaneous Power Transfer to Implantable Devices: A State of the Art Review,” Sensors, 2016). Other wireless devices, either due to simply lower power consumption, or only operating in burst mode (which is to say, the device is off or in sleep mode for substantial periods of time, and then turns on, performs its duties, and turns back off again), might only consume nanowatts. (Oshima, Matsunaga et al., “Ultralow-power Sensor Node with Nanowatt Wireless Circuit Technology,” NIT Technical Review, 1, 2015). So, the range of power consumption between devices can range over greater than 10 orders of magnitude. This means that, while for example, an enriched atmosphere of 21% O2 and 79% H2 (or higher, by increasing pressure) might be needed for some devices, other devices could operate with 10% H2, 5% H2, 4% H2 (at about the point the danger of flammability goes away), 3% H2, 1% H2, 0.1% H2, or even less (which is still substantially enriched compared to the amount of H2 in normal air, which is about 5×10.sup.−5%, 0.00005%. Given this, “sufficient” or “insufficient” amounts of reactants must be relative to specific device power requirements and operating modes, and so by “sufficient” what is meant is “enough to carry out the intended functions which are fuel-cell powered.”
(73) Non-Medical Applications
(74) Medical uses are just one of the ways in which the methods and systems as described herein could be applied. The use of devices adapted to extract fuel and oxidizer directly from their environment, while enriching that environment with fuel and/or oxidizer as needed, could be applied to many very different applications. For example, consider environmental remediation. If devices that, e.g., destroyed or collected some undesirable elements or compounds in the environment needed a way to gather power that would let them operate longer, or allow the devices to be simplified or have greater space available for other functions, this could be done.
(75) Hydrogen, for example, is non-toxic, any that escaped would dissipate harmlessly. The only concern would be fire/explosion, but in some situations, even that is unlikely to be an issue. For example, if the target of the environmental remediation was a body of water, hydrogen could be added to the water. Assuming that the water contained living organisms (e.g., fish in a lake), oxygen might be provided as well, to replace any oxygen used by the fuel cells. Aeration of the water with oxygen and hydrogen, done properly, would not create a risk of fire or explosion because such reactions cannot propagate in water. While some H2 and O2 would escape from the top of the body of water via diffusion, H2, being much lighter than air, will quickly and harmlessly diffuse away. As long as the aeration of the water with H2 is kept to a rate that does not allow a flammable/explosion concentration to accumulate at the water's surface, the risk of fire/explosion is essentially eliminated. While other gasses, generally having lower diffusion constants than H2, and being heavier than H2, could pose a greater concern in terms of developing a concentrated layer at the water's surface, these factors can be taken into account and other gasses use safely by many methods, such as reducing the rate of aerating the fuel into the water, using fans to disperse the gasses, or by placing a temporary cover over either the entire body of water if desired and feasible, or portions of the body of water above where the aeration is taking place. Such a cover would have the effect of trapping the gasses in the water, where they cannot be a flame or explosion hazard. Additionally, if there was concern that the fuel itself was bad for the environment, that the cost of the gasses make it desirable to use them more efficiently, or other reason exists to avoid simply letting the gas dissipate, a cover employed to contain the gas could be beneficial.
(76) Additionally, a liquid environment need not be present, although this does mean that if the fuel and oxidizer are going to be present in flammable/explosive concentrations, proper precautions should be taken. For example, consider the utility of robots, sensors, or other devices with an essentially limitless supply of reactants (via enriching the environment) that could be used for anything from manufacturing to monitoring or sensing of many types, or many other uses. In some cases, the fire hazard would mean that controlled conditions (e.g., spark prevention, perhaps via grounding, or mixing water vapor into the gas) would be recommended. None the less, the ability to refuel any number of devices just by, e.g., pumping some hydrogen into the space in which the devices were operating, could be attractive as compared to changing batteries, running power lines, or say, relying upon solar power (which may not provide enough energy and is not present at night or in dark, enclosed conditions).
(77) Fuel Safety
(78) As noted elsewhere herein, a hydrogen concentration >4% or an acetylene concentration >2.5% in air can explode. Many other fuels have similar safety issues. However, such issues can be addressed. For example, non-sparking lab equipment is available for use in flammable atmospheres, and gas levels can be monitored and regulated (where it is feasible to stay out of the flammable range, which it may not be). Also, in some cases, such as application of the enriched-environment with a breathing mask, the fuel is going from the mask, into the lungs, and then into an aqueous environment (where it would no longer be flammable). This greatly reduces the chance for dangerous sparks, as opposed to, for example, filling a hyperbaric chamber with a fuel/oxygen mix. In fact, a hyperbaric chamber can be used without having any fuel in the general air. The chamber only needs to supply the pressure. The fuel, along with the necessary oxygen, can still be supplied via a breathing mask, at the pressure of the hyperbaric chamber. This would be similar to underwater divers breathing gas mixes at greater than 1 atm; they aren't breathing the water, yet the water is supplying the pressure that causes the inhaled gas to be above 1 atm. In fact, the bottom of a pool could, in theory, serve as a hyperbaric chamber (which would certainly reduce the chance of fire).
(79) Regarding potential health risks due to toxic effects of hydrogen on the subject, available data does not indicate any toxic effects, even at relatively high concentrations. Available data are limited, since many medical studies with H2 are performed using only 2-4% H2, presumably to avoid the explosion risk noted above. For H2 concentrations less than 4%, there are numerous studies on inhaled H2 in both animals and humans (Ge, Yang et al., “Molecular hydrogen: a preventative and therapeutic medical gas for various diseases,” Oncotarget, 60, 2017).
(80) The data available pertaining to inhaled H2 concentrations >4% generally comes from deep diving or space research, using gas mixtures where the O2 level is kept low, again to reduce explosion risk. Special gas mixes for diving include Hydreliox (49% H, 50.2% He, and 0.8% O), and Hydrox (96% H, 4% O). Very low concentrations of O2 can be used in deep diving because high pressures are employed, and the pressure is such that the total amount of O2 available for biological processes is still sufficient, even though the concentration in the mixture is low enough to minimize the risk of explosion.
(81) It should be noted that, given the increased pressure in deep diving, the total amount of hydrogen being inhaled when such mixtures are employed can be over 30× that of breathing 79% hydrogen at 1 atm. Various tests, and deep dives, have been done at 30-50+ atm, some for days, or even weeks at a time. (Gerard, Comet et al., “LONG TERM HYDROGEN SATURATION DIVE_HYDRA IX,” Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society, Inc. Joint Annual Scientific Meeting with the International Congress for Hyperbaric Medicine and the European Undersea Biomedical Society, Amsterdam, N L, 1990) In these tests, no apparent toxic effect of breathing very high amounts of hydrogen were found. Other than its apparent ability to quench free radicals (for which it has been studies as a therapeutic agent), H2 seems to be biologically inert.
(82) In a medical context, if a hyperbaric chamber is used to facilitate creating an enriched atmosphere for an organism at above atmospheric pressure, decompression should be considered. Decompression is a well-known factor in diving. When diving, water pressure increases about 1 atm for every 10 meters of depth, and thus a 2 atm pressure to obtain 179% H2 (compared to 1 atm levels) is equivalent to being about 30 feet underwater. A dive of several hours at a depth of 30 feet is just on the edge of what would be considered a no-decompression dive. Most decompression tables include 30 feet, while some start at 40 feet. For treatments requiring more than about 3-5 hours of time at 2 atm, some decompression may be prudent to err on the side of safety. Higher pressure over several hours or longer would clearly require decompression. Of course, this assumes that the organism in question is susceptible to the problems caused by decompression. If the context were, e.g., cells in a culture dish, decompression may not be an issue.
(83) While each gas will have its own set of safety criteria, include medically-safe percentages, fire-safety precautions, and decompression considerations, the explanation of the issues surrounding hydrogen should provide enough guidance to make it clear how to choose other appropriate gasses and use them in a safe manner
(84) One interesting capability that results from powering devices by use of an enriched atmosphere is that it allows devices to be deactivated by eliminating the fuel in the atmosphere (e.g., such as by replacing it with nitrogen, as in normal air). Without fuel from the atmosphere, the devices would consume all the fuel available in the local environment and then become inactive due to lack of power. This provides a safety factor allowing deactivation of the devices, even in the event of a failure of control.
(85) Although the present invention is described with reference to particular examples, other methods, systems, fuel cells, and devices are possible for obtaining the benefit of the present invention. Accordingly, the spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description of the particular examples contained herein.
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