Proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) performance degrades when carbon monoxide (CO) is present in the fuel gas; this is referred to as CO poisoning. This paper investigates CO poisoning of PEMFCs by reviewing work on the electrochemistry of CO and hydrogen, the experimental performance of PEMF
Degradation of proton exchange membrane fuel cells due to CO and CO2 poisoning
โ Scribed by Wei-Mon Yan; Hsin-Sen Chu; Meng-Xi Lu; Fang-Bor Weng; Guo-Bin Jung; Chi-Yuan Lee
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 874 KB
- Volume
- 188
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0378-7753
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โฆ Synopsis
The CO and CO 2 poisoning effects on the degradation of cell performance of proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) under transient stage were investigated. The mechanism of CO poisoning lies in the preferential adsorbing of CO to the platinum surface and the blocking of active sites of hydrogen. These phenomena were described with adsorption, desorption, and electro-oxidation processes of CO and hydrogen in the present work. In addition, it is well known that the reverse water gas shift reaction (RWGS) is the main effect of the CO 2 poisoning, through which a large part of the catalytic surface area becomes inactive due to the hydrogen dissociation. The predicted results showed that, by contaminating the fuel with 10 ppm CO at the condition of P H = 0.8 atm and P CO 2 = 0.2 atm, the current density of the PEM fuel cell was lowered 28% with rate constant of RWGS k rs from zero to 0.02. With 50 ppm CO, the performance drop was only 18%. For the reformed gas, CO 2 poisoning became much more significantly when the CO content in the reactant gas was small.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
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