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- 2011 Annual Meeting
- Fuels and Petrochemicals Division
- Fuel Cell Technology I
- (294c) A New Approach for Quantification of Morphology-Property Linkages In Fuel Cell Materials: A Case Study for PEM Fuel Cells
The objective of this work is two-fold. The first goal is to develop advanced microstructure analysis tools for direct quantification of the key structural properties of the complex fuel cell materials. The second goal is to develop a new approach for intelligently selecting small representative volume elements (RVEs) from much larger material microstructure datasets, which can be confidently used in pore-scale modeling efforts to obtain reliable results regarding the structure-performance relationship. The diffusion media (DM) in polymer electrolyte fuel cells is chosen for initial demonstration of the approach. The microstructure of a dual-layer DM sample (i.e., a micro-porous layer coated on a macro-DM substrate) is quantified using X-ray computed tomography and dual-beam focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy. Computationally efficient algorithms are developed to extract the key structural parameters (e.g., porosity, surface area, phase connectivity) from measured microstructure datasets of these materials. In particular, two novel microstructure analysis techniques are introduced for the quantification of tortuosity and pore size distribution. Using in-house microstructure analysis tools based on n-point statistics and principal component analysis decomposition, sets of small RVEs that accurately represent salient features of tested fuel cell DM samples are selected from the much larger, full datasets. A detailed validation study is performed to assess the reliability of the presented approach.