Development of an Experimentally Validated Non-linear Viscoelastic Viscoplastic Model for a Novel Fuel Cell Membrane Material

The proton exchange membrane (PEM) is a key component in proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs). During standard fuel cell operation, the PEM degrades due to cyclic hygrothermal loads, resulting in performance loss or total failure. Improvement of current PEM materials and development of cheap...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: May, Jessica Anne
Other Authors: Mechanical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46977
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-46977
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-469772021-07-08T05:27:37Z Development of an Experimentally Validated Non-linear Viscoelastic Viscoplastic Model for a Novel Fuel Cell Membrane Material May, Jessica Anne Mechanical Engineering Ellis, Michael W. Case, Scott W. Lai, Yeh-Hung Dillard, David A. West, Robert L. proton exchange membrane polymer non-linear viscoelastic viscoplastic constitutive model finite element analysis The proton exchange membrane (PEM) is a key component in proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs). During standard fuel cell operation, the PEM degrades due to cyclic hygrothermal loads, resulting in performance loss or total failure. Improvement of current PEM materials and development of cheaper, more durable materials is essential to the commercialization of PEMFC technology, which may provide an attractive alternative energy source for transportation. This dissertation investigates a new PEM material which is a blend of sulfonated perfluorocyclobutane (PFCB) and polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF). Hereafter referred to as PFCB/PVDF, this polymer blend was developed by General Motors Company™ as a potential replacement for the current benchmark PEM, the DuPont™ product Nafion®. The PFCB/PVDF blend is less costly to manufacture than standard PEM materials and investigations into its long-term mechanical durability are ongoing. Specifically, this document discusses the experimental and analytical work performed in the material characterization, constitutive expression development, and implementation of that expression into uniaxial and biaxial finite element geometries. Extension of the model to time-varying temperature and moisture conditions is also explored. The uniaxial finite element model uses a non-linear viscoelastic viscoplastic (NLVE-VP) constitutive expression with parameters determined from uniaxial creep and recovery experiments at a single environmental condition. Validation tests show that this model accurately predicts results from uniaxial tension experiments, such as stress relaxation, force ramp, and multistep creep and recovery, to stresses of 8 MPa and strains approaching 15%, which is the maximum hygrothermal strain expected in an operating fuel cell. The biaxial finite element model combines the NLVE-VP constitutive expression with the geometry of a pressure-loaded blister experiment, which better approximates fuel cell membrane constraints. Results from the biaxial model are compared to experimental results. The model accurately predicts strain in the blister test but predicts stresses that differ from those estimated from blister curvature. Additionally, it is found that both the non-linear viscoelastic and viscoplastic parameters are functions of the operating environment. Future experimental work is needed to characterize that dependence before the constitutive model is used to simulate the response of the PFCB/PVDF blend to fuel cell operating conditions. Ph. D. 2014-04-05T08:00:15Z 2014-04-05T08:00:15Z 2014-04-04 Dissertation vt_gsexam:2276 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46977 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic proton exchange membrane
polymer
non-linear viscoelastic
viscoplastic
constitutive model
finite element analysis
spellingShingle proton exchange membrane
polymer
non-linear viscoelastic
viscoplastic
constitutive model
finite element analysis
May, Jessica Anne
Development of an Experimentally Validated Non-linear Viscoelastic Viscoplastic Model for a Novel Fuel Cell Membrane Material
description The proton exchange membrane (PEM) is a key component in proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs). During standard fuel cell operation, the PEM degrades due to cyclic hygrothermal loads, resulting in performance loss or total failure. Improvement of current PEM materials and development of cheaper, more durable materials is essential to the commercialization of PEMFC technology, which may provide an attractive alternative energy source for transportation. This dissertation investigates a new PEM material which is a blend of sulfonated perfluorocyclobutane (PFCB) and polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF). Hereafter referred to as PFCB/PVDF, this polymer blend was developed by General Motors Company™ as a potential replacement for the current benchmark PEM, the DuPont™ product Nafion®. The PFCB/PVDF blend is less costly to manufacture than standard PEM materials and investigations into its long-term mechanical durability are ongoing. Specifically, this document discusses the experimental and analytical work performed in the material characterization, constitutive expression development, and implementation of that expression into uniaxial and biaxial finite element geometries. Extension of the model to time-varying temperature and moisture conditions is also explored. The uniaxial finite element model uses a non-linear viscoelastic viscoplastic (NLVE-VP) constitutive expression with parameters determined from uniaxial creep and recovery experiments at a single environmental condition. Validation tests show that this model accurately predicts results from uniaxial tension experiments, such as stress relaxation, force ramp, and multistep creep and recovery, to stresses of 8 MPa and strains approaching 15%, which is the maximum hygrothermal strain expected in an operating fuel cell. The biaxial finite element model combines the NLVE-VP constitutive expression with the geometry of a pressure-loaded blister experiment, which better approximates fuel cell membrane constraints. Results from the biaxial model are compared to experimental results. The model accurately predicts strain in the blister test but predicts stresses that differ from those estimated from blister curvature. Additionally, it is found that both the non-linear viscoelastic and viscoplastic parameters are functions of the operating environment. Future experimental work is needed to characterize that dependence before the constitutive model is used to simulate the response of the PFCB/PVDF blend to fuel cell operating conditions. === Ph. D.
author2 Mechanical Engineering
author_facet Mechanical Engineering
May, Jessica Anne
author May, Jessica Anne
author_sort May, Jessica Anne
title Development of an Experimentally Validated Non-linear Viscoelastic Viscoplastic Model for a Novel Fuel Cell Membrane Material
title_short Development of an Experimentally Validated Non-linear Viscoelastic Viscoplastic Model for a Novel Fuel Cell Membrane Material
title_full Development of an Experimentally Validated Non-linear Viscoelastic Viscoplastic Model for a Novel Fuel Cell Membrane Material
title_fullStr Development of an Experimentally Validated Non-linear Viscoelastic Viscoplastic Model for a Novel Fuel Cell Membrane Material
title_full_unstemmed Development of an Experimentally Validated Non-linear Viscoelastic Viscoplastic Model for a Novel Fuel Cell Membrane Material
title_sort development of an experimentally validated non-linear viscoelastic viscoplastic model for a novel fuel cell membrane material
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46977
work_keys_str_mv AT mayjessicaanne developmentofanexperimentallyvalidatednonlinearviscoelasticviscoplasticmodelforanovelfuelcellmembranematerial
_version_ 1719416331110973440