Design of an Improved Moisture Separator in a Turbocharger System for Fuel Cells

Moisture recovery is important in the operation of many fuel cell systems, especially proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells. The exhaust of a PEM fuel cell is a moderate temperature, pressurized humid air stream. A system that recovers liquid water condensate from the pressurized humid exhaust...

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Main Author: Aspinwall, Jacob Raleigh
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/4976
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-49762013-01-07T20:10:53ZDesign of an Improved Moisture Separator in a Turbocharger System for Fuel CellsAspinwall, Jacob RaleighMoisture recoveryMoisture separatorPEM fuel cellTurbochargerCentrifugal moisture separatorTurbineTwo-phase flowFuel cellsMoisture recovery is important in the operation of many fuel cell systems, especially proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells. The exhaust of a PEM fuel cell is a moderate temperature, pressurized humid air stream. A system that recovers liquid water condensate from the pressurized humid exhaust stream of a PEM fuel cell would markedly increase the effectiveness of such a system. The recovered water could be used to hydrate the fuel cell membrane, and it could supply a hydrocarbon reformer used for generating hydrogen. This project investigated and documented moisture recovery from the simulated humid exhaust stream of a 25 kW fuel cell with an improved axial flow separator. An axial flow centrifugal separator design was chosen as the best candidate due to its high efficiency and low pressure drop and a prototype was designed and constructed. The separator was then integrated into an experimental test system. First, the stream was simulated by heating compressed air and then humidifying it with superheated steam. Then, after expanding through the turbine section of an automotive turbocharger, the humid stream was passed through the moisture separator where liquid water condensate was removed from the flow. Results are presented for varying turbine inlet conditions at three separate separation lengths. It is shown that the separation efficiency for the improved design was 40% higher and the pressure drop was only 1/3 that of the conventional separator.Georgia Institute of Technology2005-03-02T22:11:26Z2005-03-02T22:11:26Z2004-05-12Thesis813685 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/4976en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Moisture recovery
Moisture separator
PEM fuel cell
Turbocharger
Centrifugal moisture separator
Turbine
Two-phase flow
Fuel cells
spellingShingle Moisture recovery
Moisture separator
PEM fuel cell
Turbocharger
Centrifugal moisture separator
Turbine
Two-phase flow
Fuel cells
Aspinwall, Jacob Raleigh
Design of an Improved Moisture Separator in a Turbocharger System for Fuel Cells
description Moisture recovery is important in the operation of many fuel cell systems, especially proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells. The exhaust of a PEM fuel cell is a moderate temperature, pressurized humid air stream. A system that recovers liquid water condensate from the pressurized humid exhaust stream of a PEM fuel cell would markedly increase the effectiveness of such a system. The recovered water could be used to hydrate the fuel cell membrane, and it could supply a hydrocarbon reformer used for generating hydrogen. This project investigated and documented moisture recovery from the simulated humid exhaust stream of a 25 kW fuel cell with an improved axial flow separator. An axial flow centrifugal separator design was chosen as the best candidate due to its high efficiency and low pressure drop and a prototype was designed and constructed. The separator was then integrated into an experimental test system. First, the stream was simulated by heating compressed air and then humidifying it with superheated steam. Then, after expanding through the turbine section of an automotive turbocharger, the humid stream was passed through the moisture separator where liquid water condensate was removed from the flow. Results are presented for varying turbine inlet conditions at three separate separation lengths. It is shown that the separation efficiency for the improved design was 40% higher and the pressure drop was only 1/3 that of the conventional separator.
author Aspinwall, Jacob Raleigh
author_facet Aspinwall, Jacob Raleigh
author_sort Aspinwall, Jacob Raleigh
title Design of an Improved Moisture Separator in a Turbocharger System for Fuel Cells
title_short Design of an Improved Moisture Separator in a Turbocharger System for Fuel Cells
title_full Design of an Improved Moisture Separator in a Turbocharger System for Fuel Cells
title_fullStr Design of an Improved Moisture Separator in a Turbocharger System for Fuel Cells
title_full_unstemmed Design of an Improved Moisture Separator in a Turbocharger System for Fuel Cells
title_sort design of an improved moisture separator in a turbocharger system for fuel cells
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/4976
work_keys_str_mv AT aspinwalljacobraleigh designofanimprovedmoistureseparatorinaturbochargersystemforfuelcells
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