Fuel cell
11811074 · 2023-11-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
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
H01M2250/20
ELECTRICITY
H01M4/86
ELECTRICITY
H01M4/8825
ELECTRICITY
Y02T90/40
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
Abstract
The invention relates to a fuel cell (110) comprising two gas diffusion layers (70), two electrode elements (10, 10′) and a membrane element (30). The membrane element (30) is arranged between the two gas diffusion layers (70), each electrode element (10, 10′) being embedded between a gas diffusion layer (70) and the membrane element (30). The membrane element (30) is in the form of an amorphous carbon layer.
Claims
1. A fuel cell (110) comprising two gas diffusion layers (70), two electrode elements (10, 10′) and a membrane element (30), wherein the membrane element (30) is arranged between the two gas diffusion layers (70), with a respective one of the two electrode elements (10, 10′) being embedded between one of the two gas diffusion layers (70) and the membrane element (30), characterized in that the membrane element (30) is configured as an amorphous carbon layer.
2. The fuel cell (110) as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the membrane element (30) is configured as a hydrogen-containing amorphous carbon layer.
3. The fuel cell (110) as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the membrane element (30) is configured as a tetrahedral hydrogen-free amorphous carbon layer.
4. The fuel cell (110) as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the amorphous carbon layer has been doped.
5. The fuel cell (110) as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that a catalyst structure (31) is arranged on at least one of the electrode elements (10, 10′).
6. The fuel cell (110) as claimed in claim 5, characterized in that the catalyst structure (31) has been added as a doping substance to the membrane element (30).
7. The fuel cell (110) as claimed in claim 5, characterized in that a gaseous fuel flows against the catalyst structure (31) during an electrochemical reaction.
8. A process for producing a fuel cell (110) as claimed in claim 5, characterized by the following process steps: a first of the two electrode elements (10, 10′) with the catalyst structure (31) is firstly applied to the gas diffusion layer (70), the membrane element (30) is subsequently applied on top of the electrode element (10, 10′), a second of the two electrode elements (10, 10′) with the catalyst structure (31) is applied to the other side of the membrane element (30).
9. A process for producing a fuel cell (110) as claimed in claim 5, characterized by the following process steps: a coating process for the membrane element (30) onto the gas diffusion layer (70) is firstly commenced, a doping process for a first of the two electrode elements (10, 10′) with the catalyst structure (31) is carried out in parallel for at least part of the time, a further doping process for the second of the two electrode elements (10, 10′) with the catalyst structure (31) is started on the other side of the membrane element (30) before completion of the coating process.
10. The process as claimed in claim 8, wherein a pickling process for activating the gas diffusion layer (70) is carried out.
11. A method for operating a fuel cell (110) as claimed in claim 1, characterized by the following method steps: provision of a fuel at the one gas diffusion layer (70), provision of an oxidant at the other gas diffusion layer (70), where neither fuel nor oxidant are enriched with moisture.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Further optional details and features of the invention may be derived from the following description of preferred working examples, with reference being made to the figures.
(2) The figures show:
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7)
H2=>2H++2e− (anode reaction)
2H++2e−+½O2=>H2O (cathode reaction).
The electric power generated can be consumed in a load element. The reactant oxygen can be supplied in the form of ambient air to the fuel cell 110. Linking of the various fuel cells 110 in series by means of a conduction element makes it possible to achieve a high voltage which can be made available to the load element, for instance an electric motor. In order to achieve uniform distribution of the reactants on the electrode elements 10, 10′, the fuel cell 110 has a flow field plate 40. The two starting materials flow via the inflow elements 130, 131 into the interior of the fuel cell. Here, a fuel such as hydrogen is fed to the fuel cell 110 through the inflow element 130. The oxidant flows through the inflow element 131 into the fuel cell. In order to achieve uniform distribution of the fuel over the full area of the electrode element 10, 10′, two flow field plates 40 are arranged in the fuel cell 110. A space is formed between the electrode elements 10, 10′ and the respective flow field plate 40, and a gas diffusion layer 70 is arranged in this. This gas diffusion layer 70 generally consists of a pressed carbon nonwoven. The membrane element 30 together with the two adjoining electrode elements 10, 10′ forms a membrane-electrode assembly 20, which will be discussed in more detail below.
(8)
(9) To illustrate this,
(10) An analogous three-phase boundary is formed on the cathode side. This can be seen in
(11) According to the invention, the membrane element 30 is configured as DLC (Diamond-like Carbon) layer, i.e. as amorphous carbon layer. Due to the amorphous carbon layer, the membrane-electrode assembly 20 can be subjected to significantly higher operating temperatures, advantageously up to 350° C., than has been the case when using conventional materials for the membrane element 30. This is associated with a significantly simpler water/temperature management for the fuel cell 110 and also the potential for a higher efficiency of the fuel cell 110 or the fuel cell system 100.
(12) The amorphous carbon layer is gastight, electrically insulating and proton-conducting, and thus differs significantly from a graphite layer and is therefore very well-suited as membrane element 30. The amorphous carbon layer requires only little or even no moisture for its proton conductivity, so that it is resistant to much higher temperatures. The increased heat resistance also allows a reduced outlay for cooling, which makes denser packing of the fuel cells and thus an increased power density possible.
(13) Furthermore, the membrane-electrode assembly 20 having a membrane element 30 composed of an amorphous carbon layer offers manufacturing advantages:
(14) As a result of the coating technique, the catalysts or the catalyst structure 31 can be joined more simply to the membrane element 30 and to the electrode elements 10, 10′ or to a support material, which preferably consists of carbon, in order to form the electrode. As an alternative, therefore, an efficiency of the fuel cell system 100 comparable with a similar system from the prior art can be achieved using less catalyst material, which is very expensive.
(15) In preferred manufacturing processes, the membrane element 30 is applied as DLC layer by means of coating technology to the gas diffusion layer 70, with insertion of the electrode element 10, 10′ in between. The composition of the DLC layer (in particular the content of sp2 and sp3 bonds and hydrogen bonds) can be varied/set by means of process parameters.
(16) In further developments, the amorphous carbon layer is also able to be doped with different dopants or doping substances and thus able to be modified in terms of its properties, including in respect of the proton conductivity. Thus, the catalyst structure 31 can also advantageously be embedded as dopant in the DLC layer or in the membrane element 30.
(17) All amorphous carbon layers indicated in VDI 2840, for example amorphous carbon layers configured as a-C:H or ta-C, where a-C:H denotes a hydrogen-containing amorphous carbon layer and ta-C denotes a tetrahedral hydrogen-free amorphous carbon layer, are suitable as membrane element 30.
(18) To achieve good bonding of the amorphous carbon layer or of the membrane element 30 to the gas diffusion layer 70, this bonding is advantageously preceded by a pickling process which cleans and activates the surface and thus allows effective docking of the membrane element 30 with the gas diffusion layer 70.
(19) The membrane element 30 can optionally be provided on both sides with a catalyst structure (for example Pt, Rh by means of PVD coating or reactive PVD coating; PVD=Physical Vapor Deposition). Here, a distinction is made between two preferred variants:
(20) The catalyst structures 31 are arranged on the outside of the membrane element 30 and are in direct contact with the media surrounding the membrane element 30, as shown in
(21) The catalyst structure 31 is minimally embedded in the membrane element 30. The reaction then occurs not more than a few nanometers through the membrane element 30. For this purpose, the DLC coating process is firstly commenced on the gas diffusion layer 70 and, depending on the embedding depth, the doping process for the catalyst structure 31 is carried out in parallel. In an analogous way, a parallel doping or coating process for the second catalyst structure 31 can again be carried out shortly before the end of the DLC coating process but on the opposite side of the membrane element 70.