Ayuda
Ir al contenido

Dialnet


Resumen de Modelling and control of pem fuel cells

María Laura Sarmiento Carnevali

  • In recent years, the PEM fuel cell technology has been incorporated to the R&D plans of many key companies in the automotive, stationary power and portable electronics sectors. However, despite current developments, the technology is not mature enough to be significantly introduced into the energy market. Performance, durability and cost are the key challenges.

    The performance and durability of PEM fue! cells significantly depend on variations in the concentrations of hydrogen and oxygen in the gas channels, water activity in the catalyst layers and other backing layers, water content in the polymer electrolyte membrane, as well as temperature, among other variables. Such variables exhibit intemal spatial dependence in the direction of the fuel and air streams of the anode and cathode. Highly non-uniform spatial distributions in PEM fuel cells result in local over-heating, cell flooding, accelerated ageing, and lower power output than expected.

    Despite the importance of spatial variations of certain variables in PEM fuel cells, not many works available in the literature target the control of spatial profiles. Most control-oriented designs use lumped-parameter models because of their simplicity and convenience for controller performance. In contrast, this Doctoral Thesis targets the distributed parameter modelling and control of PEM fuel cells.

    In the modelling part, the research addresses the detailed development of a non-linear distributed parameter model of a single PEM fuel cell, which incorporates the effects of spatial variations of variables that are relevant to its proper performance. The model is first used to analyse important cell intemal spatial profiles, and it is later simplified in arder to decrease its computational complexity and make it suitable for control purposes. In this task, two different model order reduction techniques are applied and compared.

    The purpose of the control part is to tackle water management and supply of reactants, which are two major PEM fuel cell operation challenges with important degradation consequences. In this part of the Thesis, two decentralised control strategies based on distributed parameter model predictive controllers are designed, implemented and analysed via simulation environment State observers are also designed to estímate intemal unmeasurable spatial profiles necessary for the control action.

    The aim of the first strategy is to monitor and control observed water activity spatial profiles on both sides of the membrana to appropriate levels. These target values are carefully chosen to combine proper membrane, catalyst layer and gas diffusion layer humídification, whilst the rate of accumulation of excess liquid water is reduced. The key objective of this approach is to decrease the frequency of water removal actions that cause disruption in the power supplied by the cell, increased parasitic losses or degradation of cell efficiency.

    The second strategy is a variation of the previous water activity control strategy, which includes the control of spatial distribution of gases in the fuel and air channels. This integrated solution aims to avoid starvation of reactants by controlling corresponding concentration spatial profiles. This approach is intended to prevent PEM fuel cell degradation due to corrosion mechanisms, and thennal stress caused by the consequences of reactant starvation.


Fundación Dialnet

Dialnet Plus

  • Más información sobre Dialnet Plus