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Through materials and technology developments, ORNL researchers are finding ways to improve fuel cells for powering buildings and cars.

Fuel Cells: Clean Power Source for Homes and Cars?

Fuel sells if it is cheap, clean, and carbon-free. That may become a maxim of this millennium and an argument in favor of fuel cells. These devices may be used to produce electricity in homes and cars using oxygen from air and hydrogen from natural gas. Their chief waste product is harmless water vapor.

At ORNL, Tim Armstrong of the Metals and Ceramics (M&C) Division is leading the effort to develop solid-oxide fuel cells and components using advanced materials. This type of fuel cell is flexible in the fuels it can use; for example, it can use natural gas in a process to convert chemical energy to electrical energy. How is the system made and how does it work?

Hydrogen from natural gas is passed over an anode (negative electrode) made of nickel and yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ). The hydrogen atoms break apart into positively charged ions and electrons. The electrons travel through an external circuit to a cathode (positive electrode) made of the rare-earth oxide lanthanum strontium manganate (LaSrMnO3).

Oxygen from the air or carbon monoxide is collected at the cathode where the gas accepts electrons to form negatively charged oxygen ions, which are passed through a YSZ electrolyte separating the anode and cathode. The electrolyte is heated to 600 to 1000°C by an electric heater to start the electrochemical reaction. On arrival at the anode, each oxygen ion is discharged by reacting with two hydrogen ions to form water. The heat from the electrochemical reaction maintains the cell temperature, allowing the electric heater to be turned off.

Iron aluminide alloys developed in the M&C Division by C. T. Liu, Claudette McKamey, and Vinod Sikka are candidates for solid-oxide fuel cell containment vessels. ORNL Fossil Fuel Energy Program Manager Rod Judkins and Sikka worked with Siemens Westinghouse to confirm the efficacy of iron aluminide in the fuel cell application. Compared with the stainless steels currently used for containment, the iron aluminide alloys are stronger and more resistant to the simultaneous oxidizing and reducing conditions to which containment vessels are exposed. Thus, iron aluminide containments are expected to be more reliable and to last much longer. Mike Santella of the M&C Division is working with industrial partners to develop the technology for fabricating iron aluminide containment vessels.

"This solid-oxide fuel cell can also provide high-quality waste heat that can be used to warm the home or provide refrigeration and air conditioning," Armstrong says. "Its only emissions are steam, trace amounts of nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides, and a small amount of carbon dioxide."

For powering many homes at once while eliminating carbon dioxide emissions, the M&C group has designed a power plant using a solid-oxide fuel cell and gas turbine and incorporating ORNL's novel activated-carbon and membrane-separation technologies and heat-exchange technologies, such as the carbon foam that rapidly transports heat. The most efficient gas turbines available today produce electricity using 60% of the energy in the fuel gas. Siemens-Westinghouse has designed a solid-oxide fuel cell that is 60% efficient and a hybrid fuel cell–microturbine plant in which waste heat from the fuel cell is used to drive the microturbine. This combined-cycle power plant is 70% efficient.

"Based on the results of our computer model, the ORNL design for a similar combined-cycle power plant is 80% efficient," Armstrong says. "The reason is that we combine our efficient heat-exchange technologies with membrane technologies for separating hydrogen and carbon monoxide from natural gas for use in the fuel cell." In addition, the power plant allows carbon sequestration because ORNL's carbon fiber composite molecular sieve technology (see Capturing Carbon the ORNL Way article) can capture the carbon dioxide leaving the fuel cell as a waste product. This gas can then be collected and used for enhanced oil recovery or sequestered in geological formations.


Cars powered by electricity from hydrogen fuel cells are being designed because they will eliminate discharges of carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and particulate emissions. Such a "zero emissions" vehicle is a goal of the Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles, which involves the automobile industry and the Department of Energy.

A proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell is the technology of choice in the automobile industry for future electric cars because of its low-temperature operation and rapid startup. PEM fuel cells have been plagued with problems, but recent developments at ORNL may make this technology more feasible and affordable.

The problem with using today's PEM fuel cells to power cars is that their bipolar plates (positive and negative electrodes), which are made of machined graphite, are too heavy, too brittle, and too costly for use in automobiles. ORNL's solution is to make bipolar plates from a carbon-fiber composite, which is lighter, tougher, and cheaper than machined graphite.

Carbon-composite bipolar plate (jpg, 24K)
ORNL's carbon-composite bipolar plate may be used for fuel cells in electric cars.

Ted Besmann, James Klett, Tim Burchell, and John J. Henry, Jr., all of the M&C Division, have developed a method for making composite plates that includes chemical vapor infiltration. Basically, carbon fibers are molded to make an electrode, and methane is flowed over the plate at high temperatures to deposit carbon that seals its surface pores. Because a fuel cell is a stack of bipolar plates with electrolytes between, the porous plate surfaces must be sealed to prevent leakage of hydrogen and oxygen from one cell to another—a showstopper for fuel cells.

ORNL researchers have shown that carbon-fiber composite plates not only can be made to perform as well as graphite plates but also are half as heavy, may cost one-fifth as much, are more conductive and corrosion resistant, and are easier to manufacture.

Thanks to ORNL's progress in this area, the fuel-cell car may be just around the bend.

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