Journal of Power Sources, Vol.307, 875-882, 2016
Performance evaluation of a proof-of-concept 70 W internal reforming methanol fuel cell system
A proof-of-concept 70 W Internal Reforming Methanol Fuel Cell (IRMFC) stack including Balance-of-Plant (BoP) was designed, assembled and tested. Advent TPS (R) high-temperature, polymer electrolyte membrane electrode assemblies were employed for fuel cell operation at 200 degrees C. In order to avoid phosphoric acid poisoning of the reformer, the anode electrocatalyst of each cell was indirectly adjoined, via a separation plate, to a highly active CuMnAlOx catalyst coated onto copper foam, which served as methanol reforming layer. The reformer was in-situ converting the methanol/steam feed to the required hydrogen (internal reforming concept) at 200 degrees C, which was readily oxidized at the anode electrodes. The operation of the IRMFC was supported through a number of BoP components consisting of a start-up subsystem (air blower, evaporator and monolithic burner), a combined afterburner/evaporator device, methanol/water supply and data acquisition units (reactants/products analysis, temperature control, flow control, system load/output control). Depending on the composition of the liquid MeOH/H2O feed streams, current densities up to 0.18 A cm(-2) and power output up to 70 W could be obtained with remarkable repeatability. Specific targets for improvement of the efficiency were identified. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Hydrogen;Steam reforming;Internal reforming;High temperature PEM fuel cell;Methanol reforming catalyst;Balance-of-plant