Breadcrumb
- Home
- Publications
- Proceedings
- 2009 Annual Meeting
- Computing and Systems Technology Division
- Poster Session: Systems and Process Design
- (491k) Inverse Modeling of Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
In this study, we examine a simple tubular SOFC model (instead of the accurate modeling, which entails solution to highly coupled 3-D nonlinear partial differential-algebraic equations) that accounts for the essence of the SOFC assembly. Our 1-D/2-D model accounts for mass, momentum, energy and reaction terms, and through a parametric study, we found that mass transport and temperature effects dominate the fuel cell performances. A parameter estimation non-linear program is formulated using a maximum likelihood objective that minimizes the error between the model and experimental value of cell output voltage, in order to determine detailed diffusional characteristics including nano/micro scale pore size (Knudsen effects) as well as non-isothermal effects on overall system performance. Our novel framework reported here provides a robust and fast solution methodology, and is planned for modeling extensions and addressing other critical issues in SOFC technology that require large-scale simulations.
References:
1. Jain P., Biegler L.T., and Jhon M.S., ?Parametric Study and Estimation in CFD-based PEM Fuel Cell Models,? AIChE J, 54 (8), 2089 (2008).
2. Wächter, A., Biegler, L. T., ?On the Implementation of an Interior-Point Filter Line-Search Algorithm for Large-Scale Nonlinear Programming,? Math Programming, 106, 25 (2006).