Hydrogen Fuel Cell Battery
Hydrogen Fuel Cell Battery
Hydrogen Fuel Cell Battery
Presented By
Aman Raikwar
Guided By
Prof P.D.R Patnaik
Content
Battery
Types of battery
Introduction to fuel cell
How do fuel cell work
Types of hydrogen fuel cell
Alkaline fuel cell
Working of PEM hydrogen fuel cell
Hydrogen fuel cell and redox reaction
Why fuel cell
Hydrogen fuel cell and efficiency ,environment ,nuclear
energy
Application and challenges ahead
conclusion
What is Battery ?
Battery is a energy storing device.
Batteries operate by converting chemical energy into electrical energy
through electrochemical discharge reactions.
Batteries are composed of one or more cells, each containing a positive
electrode, negative electrode, separator, and electrolyte.
Basically batteries undergo chemical reaction known as redox reaction.
Anode, it involves the Cells's Oxidation Half-Reaction and produces
electrons.
Cathode, it involves the Cells's Reduction Half-Reaction, consuming
electrons.
The cathodic half-cell is producing an excess of positive ions and the
anodic half-cell is depleting them. This imbalance within both half-cells is
rectified by adding a electrolyte to the Cell.
Types of battery
Primary cell or non-rechargeable batteries
A primary cell batteries are designed to be used once and
discarded, and not recharged with electricity
REDOX REACTION
oxidation
reduction
ELECTROLYTE
Hydrogen
Electron flow
Load
Oxygen
Cathode
Electrolyte
Anode
Water
Hydroxyl ions
Anode, H2 is oxidized:
H2 + 2OH- 2H2O + 2eH2 2H+ + 2eElectrons flow through an external circuit and return to the cathode,
reducing oxygen:
O2 + 2H2O + 4e- 4OH4H+ + 4e- + O2 2H2O
APPLICATION
The Fuel Cell produces electricity directly from hydrogen fuel, it can be
used for anything that uses power in the form of electricity, rotary
power or heat.
They can be made to be small enough to power a cellular phone or large
enough to power a town. The benefit is that the design of the system
does not change.
Therefore the markets for fuel cells is virtually unlimited.
Fuel cell powered cars
CHALLENGES AHEAD.
The cost to make the systems, the cost of development and adaptation.
The catalysts require expensive precious-metal catalysts, and others
need to be resistant to very high temperatures.
Durability and Dependability, the high temperatures cells are prone to
breakdown, need effective water management systems to operate
efficiently.
Fuel Issues:
Production
Delivery
Storage
Safety
Public Acceptance, and consumer embrace of the products.
Conclusion
Hydrogen fuel cell is good replaceable option over gasoline
engine
Pollution free
More efficient
References
(Srensen), B. S. (2005).Hydrogen and Fuel Cells: Emerging
Technologies and Applications (Sustainable World). Toronto: Academic
Press.
Harkin, T., & Hoffmann, P. (2001). Tomorrow's Energy: Hydrogen, Fuel
Cells, and the Prospects for a Cleaner Planet. London: The Mit Press.
Holland, G., & Provenzano, J. (2007). Hydrogen Age, The. Layton:
Gibbs Smith, Publisher.
Collecting the History of Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells.
(n.d.). National Museum of American History. Retrieved April 20, 2010,
from http://americanhistory.si.edu/fuelcells/basics.htm