Abstract

The temperature gradient inside an open-cathode air-cooled fuel cell is large because it uses air as its reaction and cooling media; moreover, the temperature of single cells near the endplates is low because of the high heat capacity of the endplate compared to single cells. Therefore, the cold start of open-cathode air-cooled fuel cells is difficult. In this work, the cold-start performance of an open-cathode air-cooled fuel cell stack, including the stack voltage, single-cell voltage and temperature distribution, are tested in a climatic chamber. The results show that the endplate effect has a significant adverse influence on the cold-start performance. Due to the existence of the endplate effect, the voltages of the single cells near the endplate decrease significantly. The stack can be successfully started at −5 °C without any external heating; however, when the temperature decreases below −10 °C, it cannot be started. At this time, if a certain power of endplate heating is adopted, successful cold-start can be achieved. However, if the temperature continues to decrease, the stack cannot be successfully started only through endplate heating because both the endplates and cold air affect the cold-start performance. Combining endplate and air heating may be a feasible cold-start method.

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