Reconciling temperature-dependent factors affecting mass transport losses in polymer electrolyte membrane electrolyzers

Energy Convers Manag. 2020 Jun:213:10.1016/j.enconman.2020.112797. doi: 10.1016/j.enconman.2020.112797.

Abstract

In this work, we investigated the impact of temperature on two-phase transport in low temperature (LT)-polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) electrolyzer anode flow channels via in operando neutron imaging and observed a decrease in mass transport overpotential with increasing temperature. We observed an increase in anode oxygen gas content with increasing temperature, which was counter-intu.itive to the trends in mass transport overpotential. We attributed this counterintuitive decrease in mass transport overpotential to the enhanced reactant distribution in the flow channels as a result of the temperature increase, determined via a one-dimensional analytical model. We further determined that gas accumulation and fluid property changes are competing, temperature-dependent contributors to mass transport overpotential; however, liquid water viscosity changes led to the dominate enhancement of reactant water distributions in the anode. We present this temperature-dependent mass transport overpotential as a great opportunity for further increasing the voltage efficiency of PEM electrolyzers.

Keywords: anode flow channels; hydrogen; mass transport; operating temperature; polymer electrolyte membrane electrolyzer; two-phase pressure drop.