Two-phase Flow in Fuel Cells in Short-term Microgravity Condition


Autoria(s): Guo H; 赵建福; Ye F; Wu F; Lv CP; Ma CF
Data(s)

2008

Resumo

A visual observation of liquid-gas two-phase flow in anode channels of a direct methanol proton exchange membrane fuel cells in microgravity has been carried out in a drop tower. The anode flow bed consisted of 2 manifolds and 11 parallel straight channels. The length, width and depth of single channel with rectangular cross section was 48.0 mm, 2.5 mm and 2.0 mm, respectively. The experimental results indicated that the size of bubbles in microgravity condition is bigger than that in normal gravity. The longer the time, the bigger the bubbles. The velocity of bubbles rising is slower than that in normal gravity because buoyancy lift is very weak in microgravity. The flow pattern in anode channels could change from bubbly flow in normal gravity to slug flow in microgravity. The gas slugs blocked supply of reactants from channels to anode catalyst layer through gas diffusion layer. When the weakened mass transfer causes concentration polarization, the output performance of fuel cells declines.

Identificador

http://dspace.imech.ac.cn/handle/311007/25382

http://www.irgrid.ac.cn/handle/1471x/6797

Idioma(s)

英语

Publicador

New York

Fonte

Microgravity Science And Technology. 3rd International Topical Team Workshop on Two-phase Systems for Ground and Space Applications, Univ Libre Bruxelles, Brussels, BELGIUM. SEP 10-12, 2008, pp.265-269.

Palavras-Chave #Fuel Cells #Two-Phase Flow #Microgravity #Aerospace Applications #Closed Environment #Gas Evolution #Performance #System #Visualization #Channels #Behavior #Cathode #Field
Tipo

会议论文