Material and morphological heat transfer properties of fuel cell porous transport layers
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2017
Abstract
© The Author(s) 2017. Published by ECS. All rights reserved. The complex structure of the porous transport layer (PTLs), commonly referred to as gas diffusion layers (GDL), makes direct measurement of thermal transport properties difficult. Typically, effective thermal conductivity values are obtained experimentally and computational models are developed to replicate the measurements. This approach is sufficient for generalized one-dimensional models of fuel cell performance, but is not sufficient to predict reactant maldistribution due to the presence of liquid water in the PTL. Further, the anisotropy in the PTL structure results in dissimilar properties for through-plane and in-plane transport. In this work an analytical model is developed to extract material properties from effective thermal conductivity measurements. The model accounts for the change in the effective thermal conductivity as a function of compression. Geometric changes due to compression are separated from morphological changes using a compression modulation function; the shape of which is indicative of how fiber-to-fiber contact morphology changes with respect to strain. Material and morphological properties are determined using effective thermal conductivity data for three commercial PTLs. The properties also enable prediction of in-plane heat transfer using through-plane empirical data and also provide insight into morphological changes due to compression.
Publication Title
Journal of the Electrochemical Society
Recommended Citation
Konduru, V.,
&
Allen, J.
(2017).
Material and morphological heat transfer properties of fuel cell porous transport layers.
Journal of the Electrochemical Society,
164(13), F1316-F1322.
http://doi.org/10.1149/2.0341713jes
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/12654