Abstract
Subzero cold-starts are one of the last remaining challenges to the commercialization of automotive fuel cells. The ultimate cold-start target is to exothermically self-start a fuel cell stack from −20 °C to attain 50% rated power within 30 s, expending only 5 MJ of start-up/shutdown power—currently unattainable with today’s materials, thus exacerbating the performance gap of future advanced materials. There exists a disconnect between published subzero isothermal water fill test results and industrially relevant cold-starts. For an isothermal water fill test in a single cell at −20 °C, the highest water fill capacity (7.8
m
g
H
2
O
c
m
−
2
in 2100 s) was observed for the lowest applied galvanostatic load of 10 mA cm−2 with the lowest initial water content (λ
initial
= 2.2). Conversely, the fastest time to 0 °C for a 36-cell stack from −20 °C was 54 s under an adaptive applied galvanostatic/potentiostatic load, due to adjacent cell heating accelerating the overall stack’s thermal rise. A higher λ
initial
of 6.2 or greater enhances the cold-start performance and thermal response of a stack. For unassisted cold-starts, both convective mass/heat flux are necessary to avoid accumulation of ice and to overcome the thermal mass of the endplates of a stack with 20-cells or more.
Publisher
The Electrochemical Society
Subject
Materials Chemistry,Electrochemistry,Surfaces, Coatings and Films,Condensed Matter Physics,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Cited by
5 articles.
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