Fuel cell system having a fuel cell stack arranged in a housing, and a measure for ventilating the housing
10155452 ยท 2018-12-18
Assignee
Inventors
- Stephan Friedrich (Munich, DE)
- Martin Scherrer (Poing, DE)
- Michael Bauer (Unterfoehring, DE)
- Johannes Schmid (Munich, DE)
- Norbert Frisch (Planegg, DE)
Cpc classification
H01M8/2475
ELECTRICITY
H01M8/0662
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
B60L50/72
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01M2250/20
ELECTRICITY
H01M8/04067
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
H01M8/04014
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01M8/2475
ELECTRICITY
H01M8/0662
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A fuel cell system, in particular for a motor vehicle, has a fuel cell stack arranged in a housing and a measure for ventilating this housing by coupling the ventilation stream to another gas stream. The ventilation stream is fed to an air stream which is conducted through a radiator of the fuel cell system. The radiator is an ambient air heat exchanger. If the ventilation stream is fed in upstream of the radiator, a venting opening in the housing can be placed in such a way that the ventilation stream is entrained to the radiator by the inflow air stream. Alternatively, the ventilation stream can be fed to an exhaust gas stream of the fuel cell stack and the latter can be fed to the outflow stream of the radiator. A sensor for determining the hydrogen content in a gas stream downstream of the point where the ventilation stream is fed may be provided. An electronic monitoring device which, on the basis of this sensor signal, draws a conclusion about hydrogen which is possibly located in a free state within the housing.
Claims
1. A fuel cell system, comprising: a housing; and a fuel cell stack arranged in the housing, wherein a ventilation flow that ventilates the housing and is discharged from the housing is supplied to an air flow conducted through an ambient-air heat exchanging radiator of the fuel cell system, where the ambient-air heat exchanging radiator cools a fluid flow other than the ventilation flow, and the ventilation flow is supplied upstream of the radiator.
2. The fuel cell system according to claim 1, wherein the fuel cell system is for a motor vehicle.
3. The fuel cell system according to claim 1, wherein the housing comprises a ventilation opening, the ventilation opening being positioned such that the ventilation flow is entrained by an inlet-airflow to the radiator.
4. The fuel cell system according to claim 1, further comprising: a sensor configured to determined hydrogen content in a gas flow downstream of the supply of the ventilation flow; and an electronic monitoring device which, based on a signal of the sensor, monitors the hydrogen content in the mixed gas flow.
5. The fuel cell system according to claim 4, wherein the electronic monitoring device is configured to draw a conclusion regarding hydrogen possibly freely situated within the housing of the fuel cell system.
6. A fuel cell system, comprising: a housing; and a fuel cell stack arranged in the housing, wherein a ventilation flow that ventilates the housing and is discharged from the housing is supplied to an air flow conducted through an ambient-air heat exchanging radiator of the fuel cell system, where the ambient-air heat exchanging radiator cools a fluid flow other than the ventilation flow, the ventilation flow is supplied to an exhaust-gas flow of the fuel cell stack, and the exhaust-gas flow is supplied, via an exhaust gas line, to an exit-air flow of the radiator.
7. The fuel cell system according to claim 6, wherein the exhaust-gas flow is supplied to the exit-airflow of the radiator in a mixing region.
8. The fuel cell system according to claim 6, wherein a cathode exhaust-gas flow and an anode exhaust-gas flow of the fuel cell stack are merged in a mixer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3) In the figures, identical elements are denoted by the same references designations.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(4) In the figures, a fuel cell stack bears the reference designation 1. The fuel cell stack 1 is surrounded by a housing 101, that is to say the fuel cell stack 1 is arranged within the housing 101 and is situated with the housing, for example, in an engine compartment of a motor vehicle. For the sake of simplicity, the illustration does not show the supply of gaseous hydrogen and compressed ambient air, and possibly water for the wetting of the fuel cell membrane, that is known to a person skilled in the art (in the case of a PEM fuel cell), to or into the fuel cell stack 1. In a known manner, electrical energy is generated in the fuel cell stack by oxidation of the hydrogen, whereas the reaction products and excess educts and a purging gas, for which purpose use is likewise made predominantly of hydrogen in a known manner, are discharged, as fuel-cell exhaust gas, via an exhaust-gas line 11. Here, from the anode sides of the multiple individual fuel cells stacked one above the other in the fuel cell stack 1, there extends an anode-side exhaust-gas line 2, in which the anode exhaust-gas flow is conducted, and, from the cathode sides of the multiple individual fuel cells stacked one above the other in the stack 1, there extends a cathode-side exhaust-gas line 3, in which the cathode exhaust-gas flow is conducted. In the present exemplary embodiments, the anode-side exhaust-gas line 2 and the cathode-side exhaust-gas line 3 are merged, by way of a mixer 4, to form the (common) exhaust-gas line 11 of the fuel cell system, though this is not imperatively necessary.
(5) A further constituent of the fuel cell system is a radiator 7 in the form of an air-cooling fluid heat exchanger, through which there is conducted a cooling fluid, which cooling fluid is furthermore preferably conducted in suitable fashion through the fuel cell stack 1 and is cooled by way of an air flow 6 from the surroundings. The air flow also is referred to as radiator inlet-air flow 6 and is conducted through the radiator 7. The radiator inlet-air flow 6 is delivered by way of an air delivery device 8, which is in the form of a fan and which, in this case, is arranged downstream of the radiator 7 and which therefore, more precisely, delivers the radiator exit-air flow 6. Here, the radiator exit-air flow 6 may be conducted within a suitable air-conducting device which has a closed cross section; alternatively, the radiator exit-air flow 6 may, however, also be formed by suitably shaped walls of an engine bay, for example of a motor vehicle, in which the fuel cell system is installed.
(6) The space 102 within the housing 101 in which the fuel cell stack 1 is situated must be ventilated because, owing to minimal leaks, which may be present or cannot be eliminated entirely, in the supply and discharge lines of the fuel cell stack 1, it would otherwise be possible for free hydrogen to accumulate in relatively high concentrations, which must imperatively be avoided. By way of a supply opening (not illustrated in the figures), it is thus possible for ambient air to pass into the housing, which ambient air is, via a ventilation opening 204 which is positioned suitably in a wall of the housing 101, is discharged as a so-called ventilation flow B out of the housing 101. Here, the discharged ventilation flow B may include a small amount of free hydrogen, for which reason the ventilation flow B should be conducted away from the fuel cell system in targeted fashion. Or, if the system is installed in a motor vehicle, it should be conducted out of the motor vehicle in targeted fashion.
(7) In the exemplary embodiment as per
(8) In the exemplary embodiment as per
(9) In each of the exemplary embodiments shown, a hydrogen sensor denoted by the reference designation 203 is provided. The hydrogen sensor comes into contact with one of the conducted gas flows which also include the ventilation flow B, such that, by way of a suitable electronic control and processing unit which evaluates the signals of the sensor 203, the hydrogen concentration in the respective gas flow (in the exhaust-gas flow in the exemplary embodiment as per
(10) In the exemplary embodiment as per
(11) The foregoing disclosure has been set forth merely to illustrate the invention and is not intended to be limiting. Since modifications of the disclosed embodiments incorporating the spirit and substance of the invention may occur to persons skilled in the art, the invention should be construed to include everything within the scope of the appended claims and equivalents thereof.