Forgot login?   Register
  Subscribe to Defense Tech Briefs  
  • Home
  • News
  • Features
  • Tech Briefs
  • Videos
  • Products
  • Events
  • eZines

Fuel-Cell Water Separator

Thursday, January 07 2010

Separator uses no moving parts or other power-consuming components.

The main product of a typical fuel cell is water, and many fuel-cell configurations use the flow of excess gases (i.e., gases not consumed by the reaction) to drive the resultant water out of the cell. This two-phase mixture then exits through an exhaust port where the two fluids must again be separated to prevent the fuel cell from flooding and to facilitate the reutilization of both fluids.

The Glenn Research Center (GRC) has designed, built, and tested an innovative fuel-cell water separator that not only removes liquid water from a fuel cell’s exhaust ports, but does so with no moving parts or other power-consuming components. Instead it employs the potential and kinetic energies already present in the moving exhaust flow. In addition, the geometry of the separator is explicitly intended to be integrated into a fuel-cell stack, providing a direct mate with the fuel cell’s existing flow ports. The separator is also fully scalable, allowing it to accommodate a wide range of water removal requirements. Multiple separators can simply be “stacked” in series or parallel to adapt to the water production/removal rate.

GRC’s separator accomplishes the task of water removal by coupling a high aspect-ratio flow chamber with a highly hydrophilic, polyethersulfone membrane. The hydrophilic membrane readily absorbs and transports the liquid water away from the mixture while simultaneously resisting gas penetration. The expansive flow path maximizes the interaction of the water particles with the membrane while minimizing the overall gas flow restriction. In essence, each fluid takes its corresponding path of least resistance, and the two fluids are effectively separated.

The GRC fuel-cell water separator has a broad range of applications, including commercial hydrogen-air fuel cells currently being considered for power generation in automobiles.

This work was done by Kenneth Alan Burke, Caleb Fisher, and Paul Newman of Glenn Research Center. Inquiries concerning rights for the commercial use of this invention should be addressed to NASA Glenn Research Center, Innovative Partnerships Office, Attn: Steve Fedor, Mail Stop 4–8, 21000 Brookpark Road, Cleveland, Ohio 44135. Refer to LEW-18304-1.

This Brief includes a Technical Support Package (TSP).

Fuel-Cell Water Separator (reference LEW-18304-1) is currently available for download from the TSP library.

Please Login at the top of the page to download.

 

blog comments powered by DISQUS back to top

Topics

  • Alternative Fuels
  • Biomass
  • Energy Storage
  • Geothermal Power
  • Government Initiatives
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Renewable Energy
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Remediation Technologies
  • Solar Power
  • Wind Power
  • Transportation
  • LEDs/Lighting
  • Batteries
  • Hydrogen
  • Thermoelectrics
  • Hydropower
  • Recycling
  • Carbon Dioxide
  • Energy Harvesting
  • Smart Grid
  • Waste-to-Energy

Trending

Most Popular

  1. Paintable Solar Cells
  2. Introducing the First Solar & Wind e-zine
  3. Process Cleans Wastewater, Generates Electricity, Desalinates Seawater
  4. Batteries Made From Ordinary Paper
  5. Bacteria Turns Carbon Dioxide Into Liquid Fuel
  6. New Nano-Material Could Revolutionize Solar Panels and Batteries
  7. Using Plastics to Make Solar Cells More Cost-Effective
  8. New Pathway to Forming Hydrogen Storage Compounds
  9. Generating Hydrogen from Water

Featured Video

A new lab at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is dedicated to improving the quality of light that LEDs produce. Take a look inside the lab in this video.
Read More >>

© 2009-2013 Tech Briefs Media Group an SAE International Company

  • Defense Tech Briefs
  • Embedded Technology
  • NASA Tech Briefs
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertising
  • Privacy