Events
Lecture:Water Management in a Proton-Exchange-Membrane Fuel Cell By Materials Engineering and Design
Speaker:Turng Van Nguyen, professor of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering at the University of Kansas
Time:June 8th, 2011,10:00 am-11:30 am
Venus:F210,Mechanical Building A
Inviter:associate professor. Qiang Ye(TEL:34206955)
ABSTRUCT:
Water Management in a Proton-Exchange-Membrane Fuel Cell By Materials Engineering and Design
In a Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell (PEMFC), water is dragged during operation
from the anode to the cathode by electro-osmosis. In addition, water is generated in the cathode
by the oxygen reduction reaction. These two processes often lead to dehydration at the anode and
liquid water flooding at the cathode. Both cases result in poor fuel cell performance. Water
management strategy used to address this issue has been to add water to the anode and remove
water from the cathode. This approach adds significant complexities and costs and reduces the
overall efficiency of the PEMFC system. If one could manage to force the water that is dragged
from the anode to the cathode by electro-osmosis back to the anode to create a condition called
“zero-net-water-transport-across-the-membrane,” then anode humidification could be eliminated
and water management in this fuel cell system would be greatly simplified. This presentation
will discuss the concept of “zero-net-water-transport-across-the-membrane” as a new approach
for water management and how this condition could be achieved by materials engineering and
design of the materials used in the electrodes of a PEM fuel cell.
In addition to the research presentation, I will give an overview of my research activities
and near-term and long-term research interests.
Intruduction of speaker:
Trung Van Nguyen is a Professor of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering at the University of Kansas. He recently returned to his institution from a two-year service as the Director of the Energy for Sustainability Program at the National Science Foundation. He has a BS from North Carolina State University and MS and PhD from Texas A&M University, all in Chemical Engineering. Prior to joining the faculty at the University of Kansas, he was a Member of Technical Staff at Bell Labs, Associate Director of the Center for Electrochemical Engineering at Texas A&M University, Senior Product & Process Development Engineer at Duracell, and Postdoctoral Fellow at Los Alamos National Lab. He has contributed 83 publications and 5 patents, given over 150 invited and conference presentations, and received awards both for research and teaching. He is also a founder of two fuel cell start-up companies. His current research is on transport and interfacial phenomena in fuel cells and batteries and mathematical modeling of electrochemical systems.
Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Address: 800 Dongchuan Road, Shanghai
200240