1 / 13

Fuel Cell Design

Fuel Cell Design. ENCH 340 Spring, 2005 UTC. Technical and Economic Aspects of a 25 kW Fuel Cell. Chris Boudreaux Jim Henry, P.E. Wayne Johnson Nick Reinhardt. Technical and Economic Aspects of a 25 kW Fuel Cell. Chemical and Thermodynamic Aspects. Investigate the design of

reilly
Download Presentation

Fuel Cell Design

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fuel Cell Design ENCH 340 Spring, 2005 UTC

  2. Technical and EconomicAspects of a 25 kW Fuel Cell Chris Boudreaux Jim Henry, P.E. Wayne Johnson Nick Reinhardt

  3. Technical and EconomicAspects of a 25 kW Fuel Cell • Chemical and Thermodynamic Aspects Investigate the design of --a 25 kW Fuel Cell --Coproduce Hydrogen --Grid parallel --Solid Oxide Electrolyte Our Capabilities

  4. Outline Introduction to the project Flowsheet Development Equipment Design Economics

  5. Introduction Overall Reaction Methane + Air --> Electricity + Hydrogen + Heat

  6. Introduction Gas Reformer Air SynGas Electricity Fuel Cell Heat POC Pressure Swing Absorption Hydrogen

  7. Fuel Cell-Chemistry SynGas POC H2 + CO H2 H2O CO2 CO O+ O+ “Air” Air O2 N2 Solid Oxide Electrolyte Is porous to O+

  8. Fuel Cell-Electricity SynGas POC H2 H2O CO2 CO Load O+ O+ “Air” Air O2 N2 Electrons

  9. Fuel Cell-Challenges SynGas POC H2 Hot SynGas + CO H2 H2O CO2 CO Recover H2 O+ O+ “Air” Air O2 N2 Hot Air Recover Heat

  10. Flowsheet Development

  11. Equipment Design

  12. Economics

  13. Heat Fuel Cell . Objective Develop and demonstrate a 25 kW, grid parallel, solid oxide fuel cell system that coproduces hydrogen. , the installation be configured to simultaneously and efficiently produce hydrogen from a commercial natural gas feedstream in addition to electricity. This ability to produce both hydrogen and electricity at the point of use provides an early and economical pathway to hydrogen production. . Ceramic processing and challenges in the design and manufacturing process of SOFCs will be addressed . The amount of hydrogen that the unit produces may be controlled by the adjusting the natural gas flow at steady power production (i.e., adjusting the fuel utilization). A nominal production rate of 25 kg of hydrogen per day falls within the expected upper and lower utilization limits for 25 kW electricity production. The system produces a hydrogen-rich exhaust stream that will be purified using a Pressure Swing Absorption (PSA) unit. The hydrogen flow and purity are interdependent. It is expected that purity >98% is achievable for flows of 2-3 kg/day. Critical impurities, such as CO and CO2 will be measured. It is not clear that this size system makes sense for commercial production. We are looking at a 25 kW module as a building block for commercial production to begin in 2006. The size of the 25 kW module is estimated to be smaller than a 5 ft cube. The cost of early commercial systems is expected to be <$10K/kW

More Related