Investigating carbon-capturing getter anode design using a fast computational tool

Solid Oxide Fuel Cells (SOFCs) are a promising technology in the power-generation sector because of their ability to use either hydrocarbons or pure hydrogen. However, introducing hydrocarbons to SOFCs has the negative effect of poisoning the anode of the SOFC with carbon molecules. These carbon de...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wagner, David Cortese
Language:en_US
Published: 2017
Subjects:
CFD
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/23678
id ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-23678
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-236782021-10-22T17:01:30Z Investigating carbon-capturing getter anode design using a fast computational tool Wagner, David Cortese Mechanical engineering Anode Carbon CFD Getter SOFC Solid Oxide Fuel Cells (SOFCs) are a promising technology in the power-generation sector because of their ability to use either hydrocarbons or pure hydrogen. However, introducing hydrocarbons to SOFCs has the negative effect of poisoning the anode of the SOFC with carbon molecules. These carbon deposits in the anode place mechanical stress on the anode and crack the anode interrupting the nickel-based electron percolation network. Gradual interruption of this network increases anode electrical resistance and can eventually lead to complete SOFC functional failure. However, one technology that may reduce premature anode failure due to carbon deposition is the use of a getter anode. A getter anode intercepts the carbon prior to deposition on the functional anode. In this work, A CFD model was modified to incorporate a getter anode, and the functional anode in the study saw a roughly 60% drop in carbon deposition with the addition of a 0.1mm getter anode, compared to the baseline. Also a trend was found that total carbon deposited on the functional anode decreased as the porosity of the getter anode decreased. However, lengthening the getter anode and decreasing its porosity can potentially starve the functional anode of hydrogen fuel, so a tradeoff exists removing carbon and maintaining fuel cell performance. 2017-08-25T18:21:40Z 2017-08-25T18:21:40Z 2017 2017-07-10T01:16:18Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/23678 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Mechanical engineering
Anode
Carbon
CFD
Getter
SOFC
spellingShingle Mechanical engineering
Anode
Carbon
CFD
Getter
SOFC
Wagner, David Cortese
Investigating carbon-capturing getter anode design using a fast computational tool
description Solid Oxide Fuel Cells (SOFCs) are a promising technology in the power-generation sector because of their ability to use either hydrocarbons or pure hydrogen. However, introducing hydrocarbons to SOFCs has the negative effect of poisoning the anode of the SOFC with carbon molecules. These carbon deposits in the anode place mechanical stress on the anode and crack the anode interrupting the nickel-based electron percolation network. Gradual interruption of this network increases anode electrical resistance and can eventually lead to complete SOFC functional failure. However, one technology that may reduce premature anode failure due to carbon deposition is the use of a getter anode. A getter anode intercepts the carbon prior to deposition on the functional anode. In this work, A CFD model was modified to incorporate a getter anode, and the functional anode in the study saw a roughly 60% drop in carbon deposition with the addition of a 0.1mm getter anode, compared to the baseline. Also a trend was found that total carbon deposited on the functional anode decreased as the porosity of the getter anode decreased. However, lengthening the getter anode and decreasing its porosity can potentially starve the functional anode of hydrogen fuel, so a tradeoff exists removing carbon and maintaining fuel cell performance.
author Wagner, David Cortese
author_facet Wagner, David Cortese
author_sort Wagner, David Cortese
title Investigating carbon-capturing getter anode design using a fast computational tool
title_short Investigating carbon-capturing getter anode design using a fast computational tool
title_full Investigating carbon-capturing getter anode design using a fast computational tool
title_fullStr Investigating carbon-capturing getter anode design using a fast computational tool
title_full_unstemmed Investigating carbon-capturing getter anode design using a fast computational tool
title_sort investigating carbon-capturing getter anode design using a fast computational tool
publishDate 2017
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/23678
work_keys_str_mv AT wagnerdavidcortese investigatingcarboncapturinggetteranodedesignusingafastcomputationaltool
_version_ 1719491059535314944