Abstract

Two-phase flow pressure drop hysteresis was studied in a non-operational PEM fuel cell to understand the effect of stoichiometry, GDL characteristics, operating range, and initial conditions (dry vs. flooded) for flow conditions typical of an operating fuel cell. This hysteresis is noted when the air and water flow rates are increased and then decreased along the same path, exhibiting different pressure drops. When starting from dry conditions, the descending pressure drop tended to be higher than the ascending pressure drop at lower simulated current densities. The hysteresis effect was noted for stoichiometries of 1–4 and was eliminated at a stoichiometry of 5. It was found that the hysteresis was greater when water breakthrough occurred at higher simulated current densities, which is a function of GDL properties. The operating range had to reach a critical simulated current density (800 mA cm −2 in this case) between the ascending and descending approach to create a pressure drop hysteresis zone. The descending step size does not change the size of the hysteresis effect, but a larger step size leads to lower fluctuations in the pressure drop signal. An initially flooded condition also showed hysteresis, but the ascending approach tended to have a higher pressure drop than the descending approach.

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