2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(444b) Electroosmotic Pumps for Fuel Delivery to Direct Methanol Fuel Cells
Authors
Electroosmotic flow is the bulk motion of an electrolyte caused by coulombic interaction of external electric fields with electric double layers (EDLs). Porous glass EO pumps offer large surface-to-volume ratio and relatively high zeta potential, ζ, defined as the potential drop associated with the diffuse charges of the EDL. Electroosmotic (EO) pumps have no moving parts and produce flow rates on the order of several ml/min. This work reports the development of miniature DMFCs that utilize electroosmotic pumps for methanol delivery. We have designed a 2 cm2 DMFC with forced convection at the anode and free convection at the cathode (air breathing). Performance of the DMFC was characterized in the form of polarization curves for a variety of methanol/water solutions, flow rates, and anode flow field designs using syringe pumps. This data was subsequently compared to DMFC polarization for a cell supplied methanol by a porous glass electroosmotic pump. We will discuss gross and net power output of the system with an integrated electroosmotic pump supplying a variety of methanol solutions. Preliminary experiments reveal that electroosmotic pumps can supply 8M methanol to a 2 cm2 DMFC using only 2% of the fuel cell power. While increased methanol concentration can reduce power consumed via EO pumping (by reducing ionic current), increased concentration also results in higher methanol crossover in the DMFC. We are currently exploring this trade-off further and will present an optimization balancing DMFC power output with EO pump parasitic loss.