Gas Diffusion Layer of Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell and Preparation Method of Gas Diffusion Layer
20220278337 · 2022-09-01
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
International classification
Abstract
The present disclosure provides a gas diffusion layer for a proton exchange membrane fuel cell. The gas diffusion layer is a graphene membrane, and graphene lamellae in the graphene membrane are arranged irregularly. The present disclosure further provides a preparation method for the gas diffusion layer, and the proton exchange membrane fuel cell including the gas diffusion layer.
Claims
1. A gas diffusion layer for a proton exchange membrane fuel cell, comprising: a graphene membrane with graphene lamellae arranged irregularly.
2. The gas diffusion layer as claimed in claim 1, wherein a thickness of the graphene lamellae is about 0.35—about 50 nm.
3. A method of preparing a gas diffusion layer for a proton exchange membrane fuel cell, comprising: heating a graphene oxide solution while stirring and/or under ultrasonication to remove a solvent, thus obtaining a graphene oxide membrane including graphene oxide lamellae, wherein the graphene oxide lamellae in the graphene oxide membrane are arranged irregularly; and heating and reducing the graphene oxide membrane at a temperature not lower than 900° C., to obtain a graphene membrane including graphene lamellae, wherein the graphene lamellae in the graphene membrane are arranged irregularly.
4. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein in step a), the graphene oxide solution is an aqueous solution of graphene oxide.
5. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein the heating and reduction of the graphene oxide membrane are performed in a vacuum or a reducing gas atmosphere.
6. A proton exchange membrane fuel cell, comprising: the gas diffusion layer as claimed in claim 1 as a cathode gas diffusion layer and/or an anode gas diffusion layer.
7. The gas diffusion layer as claimed in claim 2, wherein the thickness of the graphene lamellae is about 35—about 5 nm.
8. The method as claimed in claim 5 wherein the heating and reduction of the graphene oxide membrane are performed in a reducing gas atmosphere of hydrogen or carbon monoxide.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0017] Unless otherwise defined, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the meanings commonly understood by those skilled in the art. In case of inconsistency, the definition provided in the present application should be considered accurate.
[0018] Unless otherwise indicated, the ranges of values set out herein are intended to include the endpoints of the ranges, as well as all values and all sub-ranges within the ranges.
[0019] All of the materials, contents, methods, equipment, drawings and examples herein are exemplary, and unless otherwise stated, should not be understood as being restrictive.
[0020] As used herein, “includes”, “comprises” and “has” all indicate that other components or other steps that do not influence the final result may be included. These terms cover the meanings of “consists of . . . ” and “substantially consists of . . . ”. The product and method according to the present invention may include or comprise necessary technical features described in the present disclosure, as well as additional and/or optionally present components, constituents, steps or other limiting features described herein; or may consist of necessary technical features described in the present disclosure, as well as additional and/or optionally present components, constituents, steps or other limiting features described herein; or substantially consist of necessary technical features described in the present disclosure, as well as additional and/or optionally present components, constituents, steps or other limiting features described herein.
[0021] Unless clearly stated otherwise, all materials and reagents used in the present disclosure are commercially available.
[0022] Unless otherwise indicated or there is an obvious contradiction, all operations performed herein may be performed at room temperature and atmospheric pressure.
[0023] Unless otherwise indicated or there is an obvious contradiction, the method steps in the present disclosure may be performed in any suitable order.
[0024] Examples of the present disclosure are described in detail below.
Gas Diffusion Layer
[0025] As stated above, at the cathode and the anode, both gas diffusion layers serve the function of supporting the catalyst layers, as well as providing electron channels, gas channels and water discharge channels for the electrochemical reaction. According to the present invention, the gas diffusion layer of the proton exchange membrane fuel cell is a graphene membrane in which graphene lamellae are irregularly arranged.
[0026]
[0027] According to the present invention, there are no specific restrictions on the shape, thickness or area of the graphene lamella, as long as the object of the present invention can be achieved. In some examples, the graphene lamella may be a single layer of graphene or multiple layers of graphene. For example, the graphene lamella may comprise 1 to about 100 layers of graphene, and preferably comprises 5 to about 15 layers of graphene, for example about 5 layers, about 6 layers, about 7 layers, about 8 layers, about 9 layers, about 10 layers, about 11 layers, about 12 layers, about 13 layers, about 14 layers or about 15 layers. The ideal thickness of a single layer of graphene is about 0.35 nm. When the graphene lamella comprises multiple layers of graphene, the graphene lamella is a stack of multiple layers of graphene, and the thickness of the graphene lamella is the sum of the thicknesses of all of the layers of graphene and the inter-layer gaps. In some examples, the thickness of the graphene lamella is about 0.35—about 50 nm, preferably about 0.35—about 5 nm.
[0028] The shape of the graphene lamella may be regular or irregular, e.g. rectangular or polygonal. As shown in
[0029] As shown in
[0030] A conventional method of preparing a graphene membrane may consist of suction filtration of a graphene oxide solution, followed by reduction.
[0031]
[0032] Thus, the gas diffusion layer of the present invention can achieve high hydrophobicity, high electrical conductivity and high thermal conductivity at a low cost, and can thus improve the electrochemical performance and discharge stability of the proton exchange membrane fuel cell.
[0033] Method for preparing gas diffusion layer The method of the present invention for preparing a gas diffusion layer comprises the following steps: a) heating a graphene oxide solution while stirring and/or under ultrasonication to remove a solvent, thus obtaining a graphene oxide membrane as an intermediate, wherein graphene oxide lamellae in the graphene oxide membrane are arranged irregularly; and b) heating and reducing the graphene oxide membrane at a temperature not lower than 900° C., to obtain a graphene membrane, wherein graphene lamellae in the graphene membrane are arranged irregularly.
[0034] The stirring and/or ultrasonication prevent the graphene oxide lamellae from exhibiting a highly oriented liquid crystal phase, such that the graphene lamellae obtained by reduction are also arranged irregularly, thus reducing the difference between the in-plane performance and the performance in the thickness direction, and in particular considerably enhancing the thermal conductivity and electrical conductivity in the thickness direction. In addition, the method of the present invention for preparing a graphene membrane has simple operations and good controllability, as well as being low cost.
[0035] In step a), either stirring or ultrasonication may be used, or both stirring and ultrasonication may be performed. If both stirring and ultrasonication are performed, the stirring and ultrasonication may be performed in any order, simultaneously or one after the other. Depending on actual needs, the stirring or ultrasonication may be performed once or multiple times.
[0036] In step a), there are no specific restrictions on the solvent in the graphene oxide solution, as long as the object of the present invention can be achieved. For example, the solvent may be water, a non-aqueous solvent, or a mixture of water and a non-aqueous solvent. The non-aqueous solvent may be an alcohol, for example a C1-C4 alcohol, e.g. methanol, ethanol, n-propanol, isopropanol, n-butanol, isobutanol or tert-butanol. In some examples, the graphene oxide solution is an aqueous solution of graphene oxide. If water is used as the solvent, the raw material is readily available and environmentally friendly.
[0037] In step b), heating and oxidation are performed in a vacuum or a reducing gas atmosphere, wherein the reducing gas is preferably hydrogen or carbon monoxide. In step b), the heating temperature is not lower than 900° C., in order to cause the graphene oxide to undergo a reduction reaction. There are no specific restrictions on the upper limit of the heating temperature, and those skilled in the art may seek a balance, e.g. between reduction reaction speed, conversion ratio and cost, according to actual needs; for example, the heating temperature may be about 900° C., 1000° C., 1200° C., 1500° C., 2000° C. or 3000° C., etc.
Protein Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell
[0038] According to the present invention, the protein exchange membrane fuel cell may be a single protein exchange membrane fuel cell unit, or a protein exchange membrane fuel cell stack obtained by connecting two or more protein exchange membrane fuel cell units in parallel and/or in series.
[0039] The protein exchange membrane fuel cell may comprise the gas diffusion layer according to the present invention or the gas diffusion layer prepared by the method of the present invention, as a cathode gas diffusion layer and/or an anode gas diffusion layer.
[0040] Preferably, both the cathode gas diffusion layer and the anode gas diffusion layer of the proton exchange membrane fuel cell are gas diffusion layers according to the present invention or gas diffusion layers prepared by the method of the present invention.
[0041] Referring to
[0042] wherein at least one, preferably both, of the anode gas diffusion layer (40) and the cathode gas diffusion layer (50) is/are (a) gas diffusion layer(s) according to the present invention or gas diffusion layer(s) prepared by the method of the present invention.
[0043] The anode fuel is hydrogen. The cathode fuel is oxygen or an oxygen-containing gas, such as air.
[0044] The proton exchange membrane provides a channel for proton transfer, and at the same time acts as a diaphragm to block electrons and cathode/anode reaction gases. In some examples, the proton exchange membrane is a perfluorosulfonic acid membrane. Commercially available examples of proton exchange membranes are Nafion membranes produced by the US company Dupont, for example Nafion 115, Nafion 112, Nafion 117 or Nafion 1035, etc.
[0045] The anode catalyst is used to catalyse the oxidation of hydrogen. The cathode catalyst is used to catalyse the reduction of oxygen. The cathode catalyst and anode catalyst are the same or different, and may be selected from precious metal catalysts, e.g. platinum or platinum alloys.
[0046] The two electrode plates comprise the cathode plate and the anode plate. The two electrode plates are used to collect and conduct current, block and convey fuels (e.g. hydrogen and oxygen), and conduct heat, etc. For example, the two electrode plates may be made of graphite or metal (e.g. titanium, stainless steel and nickel alloys, etc.).