Panagiotis
Trogadas‡
a,
Jason I. S.
Cho‡
*a,
Lara
Rasha
b,
Xuekun
Lu
b,
Nikolay
Kardjilov
c,
Henning
Markötter
c,
Ingo
Manke
c,
Paul R.
Shearing
b,
Dan J. L.
Brett
b and
Marc-Olivier
Coppens
*a
aEPSRC “Frontier Engineering” Centre for Nature Inspired Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering, University College London, London, WC1E 7JE, UK. E-mail: in.cho.13@alumni.ucl.ac.uk; m.coppens@ucl.ac.uk
bElectrochemical Innovation Lab, Department of Chemical Engineering, University College London, London, WC1E 7JE, UK
cHelmholtz-Zentrum Berlin, Hahn-Meiitner-Platz 1, 14109, Berlin, Germany
First published on 7th February 2024
A systematic, nature-inspired chemical engineering approach is employed to solve the issue of flooding in electrochemical devices. The mechanism of passive water transport utilized by lizards living in arid environments is leveraged to design flow-fields with a microchannel structure on their surface, through which capillary pressure rapidly removes the water generated in the electrochemical device. This water management strategy is implemented in proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) with a lung-inspired flow-field, which ensures uniform distribution of reactants across the catalyst layer. Jointly, this nature-inspired approach results in flood-free, stable operation at 100% RH and a ∼60% increase in current (∼1.9 A cm−2) and peak power density (∼650 mW cm−2) compared to current PEMFCs with a flood-prone, serpentine flow-field (∼0.8 A cm−2 and 280 mW cm−2, respectively). This significant advance allows for PEMFC operation at fully humidified conditions.
Broader contextWater management within electrochemical devices is pivotal, as flooding is detrimental to their longevity and performance. Proposed solutions are dominated by empiricism and there are significant gaps between computational design, materials synthesis, and electrochemical device prototyping, which leads to flood-prone fuel cells with sub-optimal performance. This article details a new direction to engineer flow fields for proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) that, exceptionally, do not flood even at relative humidity close to 100% RH, and continue to achieve high performance. To streamline and accelerate the design process, a systematic and holistic nature-inspired chemical engineering (NICE) approach is employed. NICE leverages universal mechanisms in nature underpinning desired properties (such as efficiency, scalability, and resilience) and incorporates them effectively into engineering design. Unlike typical biomimetic approaches, NICE does not copy nature, but is rooted in fundamentals, and makes adaptations that account for the differences in context between nature and technical applications. Beyond scalable water management in PEMFCs, the systematic NICE methodology can and has been used to accelerate innovation in a wide range of applications, from water purification and sustainable manufacturing to healthcare. |
However, the current PEMFC technology is not mature enough to meet the 80000 h and 8000 h durability targets (2020–2025) for stationary and transportation applications, respectively.13 This lack of durability is associated with the degradation of the key component of PEMFC, namely the membrane electrode assembly (MEA), and is related to the operating conditions: load cycling between open-circuit potential of 1 V vs. reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE) and optimum operating point (0.5–0.7 V vs. RHE), and 20–60% relative humidity (RH).14,15 Operation with fully humidified gas (100% RH) is rare, except during transient conditions such as start-up, shutdown, and high power loading.16 The MEA consists of a proton exchange membrane sandwiched between catalyst layers and gas diffusion layers. The catalyst layer (Pt/C) on each side of the membrane enables hydrogen oxidation (anode) and oxygen reduction (cathode) reactions, while the membrane allows protons to pass through from the anode to the cathode, keeping the gases separate. The degradation of the catalyst (platinum dissolution and sintering), support (carbon corrosion), and polymer membrane are key factors that can reduce the lifespan of a PEMFC.14,15
Flooding is detrimental to the longevity and performance of a PEMFC since it reduces the electrochemically active surface area and hinders gas transport to or from the reaction sites.17,18 A voltage decay rate of ∼0.5 mV h−1 as well as a ∼55% decrease in current density (∼0.6 A cm−2 to ∼0.3 A cm−2), 66% decrease in peak power density (∼700 mW cm−2 to ∼250 mW cm−2), and 34% decrease in electrochemically active surface area (ECSA) (∼59 m2 g−1 to ∼39 m2 g−1) are reported after only 600 h operation at fully humidified conditions (25 cm2 PEMFC, H2/air as fuel/oxidant).19 A similar voltage decay rate (∼0.8 mV h−1) is observed in the case of a 5 cm2 PEMFC operating at 100% RH for 200 h (H2/air as fuel/oxidant), demonstrating a ∼20% decrease in current (∼0.8 A cm−2 to 0.65 A cm−2) and 40% (283 mW cm−2 to 171 mW cm−2) decrease in peak power density.20
To alleviate this issue, several approaches have been used including the engineering of new flow-fields (radial, wave form, parallel serpentine-baffle),21 and the incorporation of a microporous layer (∼0.5–15 μm pore size) in between the gas diffusion electrode and the catalyst layer.22 Alteration of the shape of the flow-field negatively affects the performance of the PEMFC due to the low pressure drop and flow velocity in these flow-fields, causing the produced water to accumulate at the outlet of the flow channel,21 while, even though the incorporation of a microporous layer improves water management in the PEMFC, its synthesis procedure is tedious and requires several steps increasing the cost of the final product.22
Water management is also essential in alkaline, high-temperature proton exchange membrane and unitized regenerative fuel cells, as well as CO2 electrolyzers. The flooding of alkaline fuel cells is more severe than in PEMFCs as the distribution of water within the cell is non-uniform resulting in a flood-prone anode and a dried-out cathode, and hence to non-reversible potential losses, instability, and chemical degradation of the electrocatalyst.23,24 Flow-fields must be designed to achieve a delicate balance between the humidity conditions of the reactants in the anode and cathode, minimizing the possibility of under-hydration (i.e. cathode dry-out) and over-hydration (i.e. flooding of the anode and cathode).23,24 The flooding of the cathode is also detrimental to the performance of unitized regenerative fuel cells, significantly reducing the available active sites of the catalyst and hence increasing the potential losses in the cathode at high current density.25 CO2 electrolyzers (microfluidic and zero-gap reactors) face the same issue leading to cathode starvation of CO2 and promotion of the competing hydrogen evolution reaction. As a result, there is a significant decrease in product selectivity and efficiency of the device.26,27 Even though water flooding is not as severe in high-temperature fuel cells, because the high operating temperature can evaporate the water rapidly, an effective water management strategy is still required to alleviate dehydration of the anode, leading to the degradation of electrocatalyst and polymer membrane.28
Rather than recycling the same approaches, we employ nature-inspired chemical engineering (NICE)29,30 to tackle the flooding issue. Recently, we applied this systematic nature-inspired solution methodology30,31 to address the issue of non-uniform distribution of reactants across the catalyst layer of a PEMFC. Rather than imitating nature out of context, as in narrow biomimicry, the NICE approach is based on fundamental understanding of key principles underpinning desirable, superior features in biological and other natural systems, such as scalability, robustness, and efficiency. This conceptual insight is incorporated into the design of a target application, such as flow-field design of PEMFCs, which uses these key, natural principles to enable transformative improvements. This is achieved while considering the different context and constraints between the fuel cell technology and the chosen biological model.
An example of a natural system that has a similar role to PEMFC flow-fields, and is used as a guide for their design, is the human lung. Its primary purpose is the uniform distribution of air throughout its volume and the oxygenation of the bloodstream.31,32 Its fractal structure ensures scale-independent, uniform gas distribution throughout the pulmonary volume, from trachea to alveoli, while also achieving minimal global entropy production. The structure changes from a branched, self-similar tree that obeys Murray's law in the upper airway tree (bronchi) to a more uniform architecture in the lower part (acini), commensurate with a transition from convective to diffusive transport (Péclet number, Pé ∼ 1).31–34 Numerical simulations of lung-inspired flow-field based PEMFCs, with 10 cm2 surface area, demonstrate that the ideal number of generations (N) for minimal entropy production lies between 4 and 7. Based on these simulation results, three flow-fields with N = 3, 4, and 5 generations were 3D printed and compared to commercial serpentine flow-field based PEMFCs.31,32 The lung-inspired flow-field based PEMFC with N = 4 generations demonstrated a ∼20% and ∼30% increase in current and power density, respectively, over serpentine flow-field based PEMFCs above 0.8 A cm−2.31 However, the performance of both lung-inspired and serpentine flow-field based PEMFCs deteriorates due to flooding at 100% relative humidity (RH), with lung-inspired flow-field based PEMFC demonstrating ∼10% lower performance than serpentine flow-field based PEMFC.31 The flooding of channels in fractal flow-fields is not desirable, as the gas is redistributed within the fractal distributor network, and leads to an exponential decay of the cell potential.35
Fig. 1 Systematic, step-by-step application of the NICE approach for the design and engineering of a lung-inspired flow-field (N = 4 generations, 10 cm2 surface area) based PEMFC with an integrated capillary array (LUCY). Inspiration is derived from the water-drinking mechanism employed by lizards residing in arid environments. This mechanism is based on the passive transport of water across their hydrophilic integument by an interscalar saw-tooth-shaped capillary network towards their snout. A compact laser micromachining system is used for the engineering of LUCY, which is then installed in a PEMFC. The water management and performance of LUCY flow-field based PEMFCs are evaluated via neutron radiography and polarization measurements at fully humidified conditions, respectively. The images of thorny devil and its integument are reproduced with permission from ref. 38 (Creative Commons License). |
To verify that the unique characteristic of the water drinking mechanism utilized by lizards (water transport via capillary forces) is preserved despite the scale-up of the natural model (i.e., lizard) by a ratio of 9:1, we estimated the ratios of gravitational and viscous forces to the capillary forces via the Bond number (Bo = ρgL2/γ) and the capillary number (Ca = ηu/γ).37 Here, ρ, γ, and η denote the density (kg m−3), surface tension (N m−1), and dynamic viscosity (Pa s) of water, respectively, while, g is the gravitational acceleration (m s−2), L is the characteristic length of a capillary (m), and u is the characteristic water transport velocity (m s−1) (Table S3 and Section S4.1, ESI†). The characteristic length of a capillary in the integument of the lizard is approximately 150 μm, whereas, in the case of patterned graphite, it is nine-fold larger and equal to 1390 μm. For the natural scale (i.e. lizard), the Bond number is approximately Bo1:1 ∼ 3 × 10−3 and the Capillary number is Ca1:1 ∼ 4.3 × 10−5, whereas, for the patterned graphite, Bo9:1 ∼ 2.7 × 10−3 and Ca9:1 ∼ 2.9 × 10−5, respectively. Since these characteristic numbers remain well below one, capillary forces are dominant over gravitational and viscous forces and control the water transport in this scaled-up structure.37
The pressure difference (ΔP) in such capillary can be described by the simplified Young–Laplace equation37 (derivation of the equation available in Section S4.2, ESI†)
(1) |
X-ray tomographs confirmed that the microchannels are spread uniformly across the graphite plate and their dimensions are 50 μm wide and 300 μm deep (Fig. 2(d)). These were the smallest dimensions that could be engineered, as we were limited by the printing capability of the compact laser micromachining system. Subsequently, this patterned graphite plate with a network of capillaries was aligned and attached to a graphite gasket sheet (Fig. S2, ESI†) with laser cut holes that matched the dimensions of the array of inlets to the best-performing fractal, lung-inspired flow-field (N = 4; Fig. 2(a)). Compression alone is enough to seal these three components (i.e., patterned graphite plate, graphite sheet, and flow-field) together, as in Fig. 3(a). The term “LUCY” (LUng integrated Capillary arraY) will be used throughout the text to describe the lung-inspired flow-field with N = 4 generations and integrated capillary array.
The laser treatment used for the creation of the microchannel structure renders the surface of the capillary channels highly hydrophilic, due to surface oxidation under high temperature and ambient atmosphere. This is evident by Raman measurements, which reveal the presence of the H–O–H bending band of a free water molecule at approximately 1630 cm−1 (Fig. S3, ESI†).45
The water transport velocity across the engineered capillary channels increases thanks to their hydrophilicity (cosφ > 0 or φ < 90°), as shown by the Washburn equation:46
(2) |
The water velocity within the engineered graphitic capillary array is calculated by analyzing numerous videos on a frame-to-frame basis. Equation [2] is also integrated numerically to obtain the theoretically predicted water velocity assuming Po = 0, γ = 72.5 mN m−1, φ = 36°, η = 1 mPa s, and ε = 0.1 by least square fitting.38 The theoretically predicted velocity is in fairly good agreement with experimental values (Fig. 4(a)), indicating that transport within the patterned graphite plate is indeed dominated by capillary action.36,43,47 It is also noted that the experimental velocity values of water transport within the capillary array are similar to reported values for the Texan horned lizard and Arabian toad-headed agama (Fig. 4(a)), indicating that the transport mechanism is similarly homogeneous and the animal's mouth, or the exit of the flow-field, serves as a water sink.47
Video S2 (ESI†) shows the behavior of a parallel flow-field based PEMFC at 100% RH. A gradual formation and growth of liquid droplets is observed, which eventually block the gas flow channels and flood the cell. However, once the lizard-inspired capillary array is integrated in this parallel flow-field based PEMFC (Video S3, ESI†), any emerging liquid droplet that comes in contact with the channel wall is immediately wicked towards the outlet (bottom of the channel) and purged shortly after. Tiny water droplets periodically appear at the top and middle of the channel and disappear without growing, demonstrating that water accumulation is eliminated.
The benefits of this anti-flooding water management strategy on fuel cell performance are also readily demonstrated by galvanostatic measurements. The current density and, hence, the associated water production rate within the cell, is gradually increased to examine the behavior of parallel flow-field based PEMFCs with and without integrated capillary array. The flow-field floods after ∼20 min using dry inlet gas supply (i.e., all liquid water in the flow-field is produced by the electrochemical reaction) and the fuel cell performance deteriorates. However, once the capillary array is incorporated into these parallel flow-fields, fuel cell performance increases by more than an order-of-magnitude (Fig. 4(b)), showing that this water management strategy prevents the flooding of the cell.
These results suggest that the utilized strategy reduces the dependence of the flow-field on convective gas flow for liquid water removal. The latter helps the performance of serpentine flow-field based PEMFCs, albeit at the cost of a high pressure drop and uneven concentrations. Remarkably, the parallel flow-field based PEMFC with the integrated capillary array performs better than a serpentine flow-field based PEMFC at high current densities (Fig. 4(b)), which suggests enhanced mass transport even without convective gas transport within the electrode.
In the case of serpentine flow-field based PEMFCs, neutron imaging measurements reveal that water droplets start to gradually proliferate at the corners of the channels of the anode (upper part of Fig. 3(b)) and remain stagnant during the current hold at 0.3 A cm−2, due to the slow gas flow and the absence of a large enough droplet to initiate movement across the channel. However, in the cathode (lower part of Fig. 3(b)), water droplets spread across the channel in the direction of the flow.
On the contrary, the unmodified lung-inspired flow-field's (N = 4) propensity to flooding is evident, due to the slow gas flow. Water droplets merge with neighboring droplets to form slugs, which gradually block the channels and flood the cell, even at low current densities (Fig. 3(c)). Upon the incorporation of the capillary array in these lung-inspired flow-fields (Fig. 3(d)), water accumulation occurs only at the anode, which contains a serpentine flow-field; whereas, at the cathode, the capillaries rapidly remove water from the channels preventing cell flooding. Similar behavior is observed for the serpentine and lung-inspired flow-field based PEMFCs during galvanostatic operation at different current densities.
The fuel cell performance of lung-inspired flow-field (N = 4) and serpentine flow-field based PEMFCs is evaluated at 60%, 80%, and 100% RH. LUCY flow-field based PEMFCs exhibit similar performance at 60% and 80% RH to the pristine lung-inspired flow-field (N = 4) based PEMFC with a ∼30% increase in current and power density compared to single- and double-serpentine flow-fields (Fig. 4(c) and (d)). As the relative humidity increases, the performance of the LUCY flow-field based PEMFC gradually increases as well, demonstrating a significant improvement in fuel cell performance and operating range at 100% RH (Fig. 4(e)). Remarkably, the lizard-inspired water management strategy allows flood-free operation at 100% RH for the LUCY flow-field based PEMFC, up to 2 A cm−2 and 700 mW cm−2 current and power density, respectively; whereas the serpentine and pristine lung-inspired flow-field based PEMFCs have a maximum current and power density of ∼1.5 A cm−2 and ∼500 mW cm−2, respectively, and eventually flood at 100% RH. This exceptional result reveals that the implemented water management strategy effectively utilizes capillary action to remove any produced liquid water even at the highest possible RH, despite the considerably lower pressure drop of the lung-inspired flow-fields (Fig. S4–S6, ESI†). The pressure drop remains constant in the case of LUCY flow-field based PEMFC, irrespective of RH, since there is no channel blockage from produced water, whereas the pressure drop is increasing with higher RH in the case of serpentine and pristine lung-inspired flow-field based PEMFCs, whose channels are gradually flooding. This is in accordance with the measured values of membrane resistance with LUCY flow-field based PEMFC exhibiting the lowest Ohmic resistance (e.g.,∼0.42 Ω cm2 at 100% RH) under all RH tested (Fig. S7–S9, ESI†), suggesting a higher degree of hydration of the polymer membrane and thus higher proton conductivity owing to better water management.50
All results are statistically significant. Water transport calculations are based on the analysis of hundreds of images obtained from high-speed camera measurements, while neutron radiographs are obtained from the post-processing of thousands of images taken during neutron imaging. Each point of the polarization curves (Fig. 4) is an average of four measurements (∼1% error margin).
The performance of the LUCY flow-field based PEMFC surpasses even PEMFCs with installed WTPs in their cathode side at 100% RH.52,53,61 WTPs are porous bipolar plates with a dual function: the humidification of the reactant at low RH conditions and the drainage of the water from the cell when the GDLs and gas channels are filled with water.53 The incorporation of WTPs (50 cm2 surface area) in the cathode of PEMFCs results in an increase of maximum current and power density (∼1.5 A cm−2 and ∼678 mW cm−2, respectively) at 100% RH (H2/Air as fuel/oxidant) compared to serpentine flow-field based PEMFCs (∼1.3 A cm−2 and ∼600 mW cm−2, respectively).53,61 Even though these improved performance results at 100% RH are obtained with a 50 cm2 WTP and 0.4 mgPtcm−2 catalyst loading in the anode and cathode, they are still inferior to the maximum current and power density achieved by our 5 times smaller (10 cm2) LUCY flow-field based PEMFC with the same catalyst loading and fuel/oxidant ratio, showcasing the superiority of the nature-inspired design in the facile removal of water from the cell at 100% RH.
Additional disadvantages of WTPs include (i) the complexity and total cost of the required fuel cell setup to evaluate its performance, involving custom-made anode and cathode plates as well as a water chamber, and (ii) the strict requirement for installation of WTPs in both anode and cathode further complicating the setup and increasing the possibility of gas crossover through the water chamber.52,53,61 If the WTP is employed solely in the cathode, the PEMFC floods and impedes operation at 100% RH.53 Finally, (iii) there is no detailed information provided about the design principles of WTPs hindering their reproducibility. On the contrary, a LUCY flow-field is only required to be installed at the cathode and a commercial fuel cell station has been used to evaluate its performance, minimizing the complexity and the total cost of the system. Its design principles are detailed in the previous sections, ensuring the reproducibility of the experimental results.
Furthermore, our LUCY flow-field based PEMFC is superior to modified GDLs62–65 employed for water management at high relative humidity, as these are under development and cannot avoid flooding during operation at 100% RH. A recent example is a Janus GDL66 consisting of hydrophobic and hydrophilic layers. Its antiflooding ability has only been reported in a half-cell, not in an actual fuel cell, thus, it cannot be compared to the performance of our LUCY flow-field based PEMFC. Another example67 is a GDL based on nanoporous gold film; information about the actual size of the PEMFC is missing while its performance is evaluated employing H2/O2 as oxidant (instead of H2/Air in our case), yet still resulting in lower performance at 100% RH with our LUCY flow-field based PEMFC and stability challenges.
The water management strategy adopted is different to that reported previously,49 as it is based solely on capillary pressure to remove the water from the fuel cell, instead of the pressure difference between the gas and liquid water channel.49 Disregarding the geometric characteristics of the capillary network within the integument of the lizards would not lead to a successful flow-field design, since its ability for water removal would still depend on pressure drop, as is the case for conventional flow-fields. This is demonstrated in recent reports mimicking the water drinking mechanism of certain desert beetles, which bears similarities to the one of lizards living in arid environments, to improve the water management within a PEMFC.50,68 Only the hydrophilic surface of the integument of the desert beetle constitutes the source of inspiration and a hydrophilic coating is applied within the channels of a conventional flow-field; the network of micro-sized grooves that transports the water from its integument to its mouth is not considered.50,68 As a result, water removal from such bio-imitating flow-fields still relies on pressure drop (gas transport) with questionable stability, reproducibility, and scalability, as, at larger scales, pressure drop within the flow-field significantly increases, thus enhancing parasitic energy losses.31
In our work, a thin graphite plate with laser-engraved microchannel structure is engineered via a compact laser micromachining system and installed in a commercial flow-field (serpentine and parallel) and our best performing lung-inspired flow-field (N = 4) based PEMFCs. As a proof-of-concept, the water management strategy is first implemented on a parallel flow-field, exhibiting larger than one order-of-magnitude improvement in performance at 100% RH compared to a parallel flow-field based PEMFC. The capillary array is then installed in a lung-inspired (N = 4) flow-field based PEMFC, demonstrating flood-free operation and a substantial increase in current and power density at 100% RH compared to serpentine and our pristine lung-inspired (N = 4) flow-field based PEMFCs, which rapidly flood under these conditions.
Moreover, the addition of this fixture to our lung-inspired flow-field based PEMFC does not alter the pressure drop within the flow-field, which retains the lowest value (less than ∼0.07 bar for a 10 cm2 surface area) among all the flow-fields tested (∼0.12 bar for a 10 cm2 surface area of serpentine flow-field). Such a low pressure drop favors the use of a large-scale lung-inspired flow-field, as it minimizes parasitic losses.
The design of the microchannel structure of the capillary array for effective water management within the flow-field can be improved by leveraging another extraordinary trait of these lizards, namely the directionality of the flow, since water is preferentially transported from any location on their skin towards their snout.37,38 This directional liquid transport is achieved by a periodic pattern of asymmetric capillaries, where the width of each capillary channel gradually narrows towards their snout.37 Such a trait could allow for an additional degree of control over the transportation of water across the surface of the flow-field and will be the subject of a future study.
The water management ability of the proposed nature-inspired flow field can also be further improved via the implementation of state-of-the-art GDLs, such as the Freudenberg GDL.69 Its low thermal conductivity leads to significant temperature gradients between the catalyst layer and the channels of the flow field, enhancing water removal at high current densities.69
Finally, the low cost and facile engineering of the proposed water management strategy favors mass production for PEMFCs, even though its scalability also depends on the width of each capillary. For larger PEMFCs, this value might not be small enough to prevent gas breakthrough in the water transport network, since gas pressure significantly increases during scale-up. An advanced compact laser micromachining system (e.g., femtosecond laser) is required to create capillaries with smaller diameters. In terms of the scalability of lung-inspired flow-fields manufactured via 3D laser sintering,31 their high cost (∼£800 per flow-field), weight (∼0.5 kg per flow-field) and manufacturing time (∼1 week per flow-field) can be significantly decreased (∼£50, 30 g weight and 2 days of preparation per flow-field) using printed circuit board as the construction material, instead of stainless steel.70,71
BEV | Battery powered electric vehicle |
Bo | Bond number |
Ca | Capillary number |
GDLs | Gas diffusion layers |
FCV | Fuel cell powered electric vehicle |
LUCY | LUng integrated Capillary arraY |
MEA | Membrane electrode assembly |
NICE | Nature-inspired chemical engineering |
PEMFC | Proton exchange membrane fuel cell |
RH | Relative humidity |
RHE | Reversible hydrogen electrode |
WTPs | Water transport plates |
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3ee03666a |
‡ Both authors contributed equally. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2024 |