Abstract

The effects of water transport in the porous transport layers (PTLs) of polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) fuel cells are commonly studied using sub-scale pore network models or geometric models which generate effective properties that can be applied in computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models using a continuum approach at larger length scales. This approach is commonly uncoupled and uses a steady state approach, thereby approximating and averaging important details of water transport effects. To capture water transport in sub-scale CFD models requires extensive computer resources and is often very difficult to converge. In this work, a three-dimensional pore network model is implemented in the open-source, finite-volume CFD code, OpenFOAM. The model captures transient water transport through a network of pores using an experimentally determined pore size distribution. This model is directly coupled to a continuum model to directly capture the effect of liquid water on fuel cell performance. After a description of the method, results are compared with those from an in-house pore-network model for code verification. The method presents a novel approach which benefits from both pore-network modelling and CFD to investigate the subject of water transport in PEM fuel cells.

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