42 research outputs found

    Time-Dependent Mechanical Behavior of Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell Electrodes

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    The electrodes used for Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells (PEMFCs) are typically painted or sprayed onto the membrane during manufacturing, making it difficult to directly characterize their mechanical behavior as a stand-alone material. An experimental-numerical hybrid technique is devised to extract the electrode properties from the experimentally measured properties of Nafion® 211 membrane1 and a membrane electrode assembly (MEA) based on Nafion® 211 membrane at various temperatures, humidities, and strain rates. Within the linear regime, the rule-of-mixtures assuming an iso-strain condition is used to calculate the rate-dependent Young\u27s modulus of the electrodes. Beyond the linear regime, reverse analysis is conducted using finite element models of the MEA to determine the non-linear behavior of the electrodes. The mechanical damage mechanisms that occur in the MEA during tensile loading are also investigated through interrupted tension tests and then incorporated into the finite element models for determining the electrode behavior. The results suggest that the electrodes have similar behavior to Nafion® 211 membrane as functions of strain rate, temperature and humidity, but with lower Young\u27s modulus and proportional limit

    Time-Dependent Mechanical Behavior of Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell Electrodes

    Get PDF
    The electrodes used for Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells (PEMFCs) are typically painted or sprayed onto the membrane during manufacturing, making it difficult to directly characterize their mechanical behavior as a stand-alone material. An experimental-numerical hybrid technique is devised to extract the electrode properties from the experimentally measured properties of Nafion® 211 membrane1 and a membrane electrode assembly (MEA) based on Nafion® 211 membrane at various temperatures, humidities, and strain rates. Within the linear regime, the rule-of-mixtures assuming an iso-strain condition is used to calculate the rate-dependent Young\u27s modulus of the electrodes. Beyond the linear regime, reverse analysis is conducted using finite element models of the MEA to determine the non-linear behavior of the electrodes. The mechanical damage mechanisms that occur in the MEA during tensile loading are also investigated through interrupted tension tests and then incorporated into the finite element models for determining the electrode behavior. The results suggest that the electrodes have similar behavior to Nafion® 211 membrane as functions of strain rate, temperature and humidity, but with lower Young\u27s modulus and proportional limit

    An Experimental Investigation of Strain Rate, Temperature and Humidity Effects on the Mechanical Behavior of a Perfluorosulfonic Acid Membrane

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    The time-dependent hygro-thermal mechanical behavior of a perfluorosulfonic acid (PFSA) membrane (Nafion® 211 membrane) commonly used in Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells (PEMFCs) is investigated at selected strain rates for a broad range of temperatures and humidities. Tensile tests and relaxation tests are conducted to determine Young’s modulus and proportional limit stress as functions of strain rate, temperature and humidity. The results show that Young’s modulus and proportional limit stress increase as the strain rate increases, and decrease as the temperature or humidity increases. The results also show that the mechanical response of Nafion® 211 membrane is more sensitive to typical changes in strain rate or temperature than to typical changes in humidity. In addition, two temperature/humidity cycles are conducted to determine the steady state swelling behavior of Nafion® 211 membrane as a function of temperature and humidity. The results show that the membrane swells with increasing temperature and humidity, and that there is little or no hygro-thermal history effect for the swelling strains

    An Experimental Investigation of Strain Rate, Temperature and Humidity Effects on the Mechanical Behavior of a Perfluorosulfonic Acid Membrane

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    The time-dependent hygro-thermal mechanical behavior of a perfluorosulfonic acid (PFSA) membrane (Nafion® 211 membrane) commonly used in Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells (PEMFCs) is investigated at selected strain rates for a broad range of temperatures and humidities. Tensile tests and relaxation tests are conducted to determine Young’s modulus and proportional limit stress as functions of strain rate, temperature and humidity. The results show that Young’s modulus and proportional limit stress increase as the strain rate increases, and decrease as the temperature or humidity increases. The results also show that the mechanical response of Nafion® 211 membrane is more sensitive to typical changes in strain rate or temperature than to typical changes in humidity. In addition, two temperature/humidity cycles are conducted to determine the steady state swelling behavior of Nafion® 211 membrane as a function of temperature and humidity. The results show that the membrane swells with increasing temperature and humidity, and that there is little or no hygro-thermal history effect for the swelling strains

    Time-Dependent Mechanical Response of a Composite PFSA Membrane

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    The mechanical response of a composite fuel cell membrane, made from layers of reinforced and unreinforced PFSA material, is investigated via both experimental and numerical means. First, the time-dependent mechanical properties for the reinforced layers are measured for a range of environmental and loading conditions. A three-network, viscoelastic-plastic constitutive model is developed to characterize the mechanical response of this reinforced membrane material. This constitutive model is then used in finite element simulations of a fuel cell unit (consisting of composite membrane, electrodes, gas diffusion layer and bipolar plates) where the effect of relative humidity (RH) cycling on the stress response of the composite membrane is investigated. Using numerical simulations, various layering configurations for the composite membrane and different load cases are studied. The investigation provides insight into the stress response of the membrane and suggests possible configurations that may improve the effective membrane life

    Six underutilized grain crops for food and nutrition in China

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    Underutilized grain crops are an essential part of the food system that supports humankind. A number of these crops can be found in China, such as barley, buckwheat, broomcorn millet, foxtail millet, oat, and sorghum, which have characteristics such as containing more nutritional elements, being resistant to biotic and abiotic stresses, and having strong adaptability to poor environments. The diversity of these crops provides options for farmers’ livelihoods and healthy food for the population. Although some mentioned crops such as barley, oat, and sorghum are not underutilized crops globally, they could be considered underutilized in China as they were more important in the past and could be revitalized for food and nutrition in the future. This paper reviews current progress in research and development in the areas of germplasm resource conservation, variety improvement, cultivation technologies, processing, and the nutrition and benefits of six underutilized grain crops in China. It is concluded that underutilized grain crops could play a critical role in food and nutritional security in China

    D3D: Dual 3D Convolutional Network for Real-time Action Recognition

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    Three-dimensional convolutional neural networks (3D CNNs) have been explored to learn spatio-temporal information for video-based human action recognition. Expensive computational cost and memory demand resulted from standard 3D CNNs, however, hinder their application in practical scenarios. In this article, we address the aforementioned limitations by proposing a novel dual 3-D convolutional network (D3DNet) with two complementary lightweight branches. A coarse branch maintains large temporal receptive field by a fast temporal downsampling strategy and simulates the expensive 3-D convolutions using a combination of more efficient spatial convolutions and temporal convolutions. Meanwhile, a fine branch progressively downsamples the video in the temporal domain and adopts 3-D convolutional units with reduced channel capacities to capture multiresolution spatio-temporal information. Instead of learning these two branches independently, a shallow spatiotemporal downsampling module is shared for these two branches for efficient low-level feature learning. Besides, lateral connections are learned to effectively fuse the information from the two branches at multiple stages. The proposed network makes good balance between inference speed and action recognition performance. Based on RGB information only, it achieves competing performance on five popular video-based action recognition datasets, with inference speed of 3200 FPS on a single NVIDIA GTX 2080Ti card

    Effect of Gas Diffusion Layer Modulus and Land-Groove Geometry on Membrane Stresses in Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells

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    The electrical functionality of PEM fuel cells is facilitated by minimizing the contact resistances between different materials in the fuel cell, which is achieved via compressive clamping. The effect of the gas diffusion layer (GDL) modulus on the in-plane stress in the membrane after clamping is studied via numerical simulations, including both isotropic and anisotropic GDL properties. Furthermore, the effect of cell width and land-groove width ratio on the in-plane stress in the membrane subjected to a single hygro-thermal cycle is investigated for aligned and alternating gas channel geometries. The results from varying the GDL properties suggest that the in-plane stress in the membrane after clamping is due to a non-linear and coupled interaction of GDL and membrane deformation. The results of the geometric studies indicate that when the gas channels are aligned, the cell width and land-groove width ratio affect the in-plane stress distribution, but do not significantly affect the stress magnitudes. However, when the gas channels are alternating, the cell width and land-groove width ratio have significant effect on the membrane in-plane stresses. The effect of land-groove geometry is qualitatively verified by a series of experimental compression tests

    Effect of Gas Diffusion Layer Modulus and Land-Groove Geometry on Membrane Stresses in Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells

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    The electrical functionality of PEM fuel cells is facilitated by minimizing the contact resistances between different materials in the fuel cell, which is achieved via compressive clamping. The effect of the gas diffusion layer (GDL) modulus on the in-plane stress in the membrane after clamping is studied via numerical simulations, including both isotropic and anisotropic GDL properties. Furthermore, the effect of cell width and land-groove width ratio on the in-plane stress in the membrane subjected to a single hygro-thermal cycle is investigated for aligned and alternating gas channel geometries. The results from varying the GDL properties suggest that the in-plane stress in the membrane after clamping is due to a non-linear and coupled interaction of GDL and membrane deformation. The results of the geometric studies indicate that when the gas channels are aligned, the cell width and land-groove width ratio affect the in-plane stress distribution, but do not significantly affect the stress magnitudes. However, when the gas channels are alternating, the cell width and land-groove width ratio have significant effect on the membrane in-plane stresses. The effect of land-groove geometry is qualitatively verified by a series of experimental compression tests

    EFFECT OF THE THICKNESS OF PAN/Au

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