Abstract

The Air-cooled and open cathode proton exchange fuel cell (PEMFC) offers particular advantages in terms of complexity and weight reduction. Therefore, it seems very attractive to support the aviation industry in their de‑carbonisation process. Major challenges in terms of operational stability and reliability hinders this technology to be used in commercial applications.Therefore, this study thoroughly examines the conditioning and optimization of open cathode PEMFC stacks, drawing insights from experimental findings. Key areas of focus include the enduring impact of pre-humidification, the quantification of efficiency enhancements through reconditioning via oxygen starvation, and the refinement of Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) data analysis under non-stationary conditions.The pre-humidification enhances stack performance by improving cell voltages from 40.09 V to 41.37 V at 30 A, increasing membrane humidity and improving efficiency. Furthermore, the residual water in the stack also functions as evaporative cooling and can assist in limiting the operating temperature of the stack during system start up. However, it is demonstrated that excessive soaking with water leads to severe flooding phenomena at the beginning of operation.A reconditioning period of 100 s through oxygen starvation induces a notable increase in stack voltage, from 41.37 V to 47.79 V at 35 A, which decreases to 43.56 V after 10 min of operation. This corresponds to an average increase in electric energy provision of about 6.2% at constant hydrogen consumption, attributed to PtOx reduction and increased water production.Despite limitations outside the medium frequency range (approximately 10 Hz – 15 kHz) for non-stationary conditions, EIS aids in understanding of the stack behaviour and supports the interpretation of current and voltage results. A novel evaluation method enables the quantitative description of the condition using EIS data. This data reveals a considerable drop (on average about 21,5% for the 10 A point and about 27,4% for the 30 A point) in charge transfer resistances of the fuel cell from initial operation to measurements after overnight soaking and the first series of oxygen starvation recovery.

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