Abstract

Developing high-power (e.g. megawatt-scale) single fuel cell stacks is of significance to extending the application of hydrogen fuel cells in high-energy-consumption fields such as aerospace, maritime, and rail transportation. Bipolar plate is one of the core components of hydrogen fuel cell stacks. Currently, the mainstream hydrogen fuel cell stacks achieve a maximum power of about 200 kW with a bipolar plate area of approximately 600 cm2. While the megawatt-scale hydrogen fuel cell stacks requires large scale bipolar plates with an area of e.g. >2000 cm2 and higher geometric complexity of flow channel. However, the structural design and manufacturing process for such large scale bipolar plates remain unexplored. Based on the concept of “partitioned modular manufacturing”, the large scale bipolar plate is divided into multiple smaller scale bipolar plate modules in this work, and then integrated into a single component, which is then formed by applying multi-step stamping process to each module. Therefore, a so-called “partitioned multi-step stamping process” is proposed to form large scale bipolar plates with fine flow channels. Experimental validation was conducted using 0.1 mm thick titanium sheets and austenitic stainless steel sheets, demonstrating a prospective solution to manufacture large scale bipolar plates for high power hydrogen fuel cell stacks.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call