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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Modelling of diffusion processes in gases, polymers and multilayered solids

Whitaker, Gary January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
2

Experimental and theoretical analysis of the mass transport through porous glass membranes with different pore diameters

Marković, Ana January 2009 (has links)
Zugl.: Magdeburg, Univ., Diss., 2009
3

Accuracy Improvement for Measurement of Gas Diffusivity through Thin Porous Media

Dong, Lu January 2012 (has links)
Accurate measurement of the gas diffusion coefficient through porous media is of significant interest to science and engineering applications including mass transfer through soils, building materials, and fuel cells to name a few. Accurate measurements are necessary for simulation and optimization of complex systems involving gas transport. The Loschmidt cell, or closed tube method has been extensively used to measuring the binary gas diffusion coefficient of gas pairs. Recent studies have used a modified Loschmidt cell with an additional porous sample to measure the effective diffusion coefficient through the porous sample. The method employs what is called the resistance network method for calculating the effective diffusion coefficient through the porous sample. In this study, a one-dimensional simulation was developed to evaluate the accuracy of the resistance network method with a modified Loschmidt cell. Dimensionless parameters are shown to be applicable for both the conventional Loschmidt cell as well as the modified Loschmidt cell with the porous sample. A parametric simulation study was performed to show that the error relates closely to the ratio of diffusive resistances of the sample and bulk gas denoted as the resistance ratio, Ω*. With a simulated experimental duration of 250s, which is typical of experiments in literature, the error was found to be negligible when Ω* < 0.1 but increased dramatically for Ω* > 0.1 up to a maximum of approximately 20% error. The equivalent Fourier number, Fo_eq, based on the equivalent diffusivity, D_eq, was proposed as an approximate expression for the degree to which the concentration gradient in the test cell has evolved. It was found that the error has nearly a linear relationship with Fo_eq. Since a lower Fo_eq means a less decayed profile with significant transience remaining, as Fo_eq drops, the the error increases. By controlling the simulation test length for different thickness and diffusivity samples such that Fo_eq = 12.5, the error was reduced to less than 1% over most of the range of parameters and less than 6% over the full range of parameters spanning two orders of magnitude for both thickness and diffusivity. The resistance network method requires the measurement of the sample thickness, a diffusion length, and two diffusion coefficients using with the modified Loschmidt cell (one with the porous sample and one without). Analysis found that the equation used for calculating the effective diffusion coefficient, D_eff, through the porous sample inherently magnifies the relative uncertainty of the measured values in the final calculated value for D_eff. When Ω* < 1, the percentage uncertainty in both diffusion coefficient measurements could potentially be magnified by one or more orders of magnitude. To mitigate uncertainty in D_eff, Ω* must be greater than 1 to ensure that the uncertainty is magnified by no more than a factor of 2. This study recommends that modified Loschmidt experiments aim for Ω* = 1 and Fo_eq = 12.5 to greatly reduce the error and uncertainty in the measurement of D_eff.
4

The study on the structure of the gas diffusion layer of a DMFC electrode

Shen, Jia-shiun 11 September 2007 (has links)
Due to the micro-pillar-structured electrodes were made in the gas diffusion layer (GDL) of the proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC), the cell performance was raised significantly; the study therefore aims to understand whether the same cell performance can be achieved if the micro-pillar-structures were made in the direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC) of the anode. At room temperature and naturally breathed air, the performance of the micro-pillar-structured electrodes was the same as the conventional electrodes. The performance of the electrodes does not rely on the surface area between the micro porous layers and the catalyst. The experimental results inference indicates that no efficiency can be completed. The study then changed the experimental condition, i.e. increased the temperature of the methanol-water solution to 50¢J and reduced the methanol concentrations to 0.5M. The purpose was to carry out the reaction of the surface between the methanol and the catalyst layer. However, the experimental result shows no variation between the micro-pillar- structured electrodes and the conventional electrodes. Because of the test of the current density of the DMFC was carried out in a small power (0~25mW/cm2). The current density of the PEMFC was carried out in a high power (400mW/cm2 ~). The study proposed that the cell operating temperature can be raised and the oxygen can be put in the cathode, the performance of the micro-pillar-structured electrodes can thus be enhanced if the reaction was in a high current density. At the finals, the study tried to compare the efficiency between self-made electrodes and commercial electrodes (E-TEK). The result showed that both max power densities can reach 17mW/cm2 at room temperature and naturally breathed air.
5

Accuracy Improvement for Measurement of Gas Diffusivity through Thin Porous Media

Dong, Lu January 2012 (has links)
Accurate measurement of the gas diffusion coefficient through porous media is of significant interest to science and engineering applications including mass transfer through soils, building materials, and fuel cells to name a few. Accurate measurements are necessary for simulation and optimization of complex systems involving gas transport. The Loschmidt cell, or closed tube method has been extensively used to measuring the binary gas diffusion coefficient of gas pairs. Recent studies have used a modified Loschmidt cell with an additional porous sample to measure the effective diffusion coefficient through the porous sample. The method employs what is called the resistance network method for calculating the effective diffusion coefficient through the porous sample. In this study, a one-dimensional simulation was developed to evaluate the accuracy of the resistance network method with a modified Loschmidt cell. Dimensionless parameters are shown to be applicable for both the conventional Loschmidt cell as well as the modified Loschmidt cell with the porous sample. A parametric simulation study was performed to show that the error relates closely to the ratio of diffusive resistances of the sample and bulk gas denoted as the resistance ratio, Ω*. With a simulated experimental duration of 250s, which is typical of experiments in literature, the error was found to be negligible when Ω* < 0.1 but increased dramatically for Ω* > 0.1 up to a maximum of approximately 20% error. The equivalent Fourier number, Fo_eq, based on the equivalent diffusivity, D_eq, was proposed as an approximate expression for the degree to which the concentration gradient in the test cell has evolved. It was found that the error has nearly a linear relationship with Fo_eq. Since a lower Fo_eq means a less decayed profile with significant transience remaining, as Fo_eq drops, the the error increases. By controlling the simulation test length for different thickness and diffusivity samples such that Fo_eq = 12.5, the error was reduced to less than 1% over most of the range of parameters and less than 6% over the full range of parameters spanning two orders of magnitude for both thickness and diffusivity. The resistance network method requires the measurement of the sample thickness, a diffusion length, and two diffusion coefficients using with the modified Loschmidt cell (one with the porous sample and one without). Analysis found that the equation used for calculating the effective diffusion coefficient, D_eff, through the porous sample inherently magnifies the relative uncertainty of the measured values in the final calculated value for D_eff. When Ω* < 1, the percentage uncertainty in both diffusion coefficient measurements could potentially be magnified by one or more orders of magnitude. To mitigate uncertainty in D_eff, Ω* must be greater than 1 to ensure that the uncertainty is magnified by no more than a factor of 2. This study recommends that modified Loschmidt experiments aim for Ω* = 1 and Fo_eq = 12.5 to greatly reduce the error and uncertainty in the measurement of D_eff.
6

A Lattice Boltzmann model for diffusion of binary gas mixtures

Bennett, Sam January 2010 (has links)
This thesis describes the development of a Lattice Boltzmann (LB) model for a binary gas mixture. Specifically, channel flow driven by a density gradient with diffusion slip occurring at the wall is studied in depth. The first part of this thesis sets the foundation for the multi-component model used in the subsequent chapters. Commonly used single component LB methods use a non-physical equation of state, in which the relationship between pressure and density varies according to the scaling used. This is fundamentally unsuitable for extension to multi-component systems containing gases of differing molecular masses that are modelled with the ideal gas equation of state. Also, existing methods for implementing boundary conditions are unsuitable for extending to novel boundary conditions, such as diffusion slip. Therefore, a new single component LB derivation and a new method for implementing boundary conditions are developed, and validated against Poiseuille flow. However, including a physical equation of state reduces stability and time accuracy, leading to longer computational times, compared with 'incompressible' LB methods. The new method of analysing LB boundary conditions successfully explains observations from other commonly used schemes, such as the slip velocity associated with 'bounce-back'.The new model developed for multi-component gases avoids the pitfalls of some other LB models, a single computational grid is shared by all the species and the diffusivity is independent of the viscosity. The Navier-Stokes equation for the mixture and the Stefan-Maxwell diffusion equation are both recovered by the model. However, the species momentum equations are not recovered correctly and this can lead to instability. Diffusion slip, the non-zero velocity of a gas mixture at a wall parallel to a concentration gradient, is successfully modelled and validated against a simple one-dimensional model for channel flow. To increase the accuracy of the scheme a second order numerical implementation is needed. This can be achieved using a variable transformation method which does not result in an increase in computational time. Simulations were carried out on hydrogen and water diffusion through a narrow channel, with varying total pressure and concentration gradients. For a given value of the species mass flux ratio, the total pressure gradient was dependent on the species concentration gradients. These results may be applicable to fuel cells where the species mass flux ratio is determined by a chemical reaction and the species have opposing velocities. In this case the total pressure gradient is low and the cross-channel average mass flux of hydrogen is independent of the channel width. Finally, solutions for a binary Stefan tube problem were investigated, in which the boundary at one end of a channel is permeable to hydrogen but not water. The water has no total mass flux along the channel but circulates due to the slip velocity at the wall. The cross-channel average mass flux of the hydrogen along the channel increases with larger channel widths. A fuel cell using a mixture of gases, one being inert, will experience similar circulation phenomena and, importantly, the width of the pores will affect performance. This thesis essentially proves the viability of LB models to simulate multi-component gases with diffusion slip boundaries, and identifies the many areas in which improvements could be made.
7

Measurement and Characterization of Heat and Mass Diffusion in PEMFC Porous Media

Unsworth, Grant January 2012 (has links)
A single polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) is comprised of several sub-millimetre thick layers of varying porosity sandwiched together. The thickness of each layer, which typically ranges from 10 to 200μm, is kept small in order to minimize the transport resistance of heat, mass, electrons, and protons, that limit reaction rate. However, the thickness of these materials presents a significant challenge to engineers characterizing the transport properties through them, which is of considerable importance to the development and optimization of fuel cells. The objective of this research is to address the challenges associated with measuring the heat conduction and gas diffusion transport properties of thin porous media used in PEMFCs. An improvement in the accuracy of the guarded heat flow technique for measuring thermal conductivity and the modified Loschmidt Cell technique for measuring gas diffusivity are presented for porous media with a sub-millimetre thickness. The improvement in accuracy is achieved by analyzing parameters in each apparatus that are sensitive to measurement error and have the largest contribution to measurement uncertainty, and then developing ways to minimize the error. The experimental apparatuses are used to investigate the transport properties of the gas diffusion layer (GDL) and the microporous layer (MPL), while the methods would also be useful in the study of the catalyst layer (CL). Gas diffusion through porous media is critical for the high current density operation of a PEMFC, where the electrochemical reaction becomes rate-limited by the diffusive flux of reactants reaching reaction sites. However, geometric models that predict diffusivity of the GDL have been identified as inaccurate in current literature. Experimental results give a better estimate of diffusivity, but published works to date have been limited by high measurement uncertainty. In this thesis, the effective diffusivity of various GDLs are measured using a modified Loschmidt cell and the relative differences between GDLs are explained using scanning electron microscopy and the method of standard porosimetry. The experimental results from this study and others in current literature are used to develop a generalized correlation for predicting diffusivity as a function of porosity in the through-plane direction of a GDL. The thermal conductivity and contact resistance of porous media are important for accurate thermal analysis of a fuel cell, especially at high current densities where the heat flux becomes large. In this thesis, the effective through-plane thermal conductivity and contact resistance of the GDL and MPL are measured. GDL samples with and without a MPL and coated with 30%-wt. PTFE are measured using the guarded steady-state heat flow technique described in the ASTM standard E 1225-04. Thermal contact resistance of the MPL with the iron clamping surface was found to be negligible, owing to the high surface contact area. Thermal conductivity and thickness of the MPL remained constant for compression pressures up to 15bar at 0.30W/m°K and 55μm, respectively. The thermal conductivity of the GDL substrate containing 30%−wt. PTFE varied from 0.30 to 0.56W/m°K as compression was increased from 4 to 15bar. As a result, the GDL contain- ing MPL had a lower effective thermal conductivity at high compression than the GDL without MPL. At low compression, differences were negligible. The constant thickness of the MPL suggests that the porosity, as well as heat and mass transport properties, remain independent of the inhomogeneous compression by the bipolar plate. Despite the low effective thermal conductivity of the MPL, thermal performance of the GDL can be improved by exploiting the excellent surface contact resistance of the MPL while minimizing its thickness.
8

Measurement and Characterization of Heat and Mass Diffusion in PEMFC Porous Media

Unsworth, Grant January 2012 (has links)
A single polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) is comprised of several sub-millimetre thick layers of varying porosity sandwiched together. The thickness of each layer, which typically ranges from 10 to 200μm, is kept small in order to minimize the transport resistance of heat, mass, electrons, and protons, that limit reaction rate. However, the thickness of these materials presents a significant challenge to engineers characterizing the transport properties through them, which is of considerable importance to the development and optimization of fuel cells. The objective of this research is to address the challenges associated with measuring the heat conduction and gas diffusion transport properties of thin porous media used in PEMFCs. An improvement in the accuracy of the guarded heat flow technique for measuring thermal conductivity and the modified Loschmidt Cell technique for measuring gas diffusivity are presented for porous media with a sub-millimetre thickness. The improvement in accuracy is achieved by analyzing parameters in each apparatus that are sensitive to measurement error and have the largest contribution to measurement uncertainty, and then developing ways to minimize the error. The experimental apparatuses are used to investigate the transport properties of the gas diffusion layer (GDL) and the microporous layer (MPL), while the methods would also be useful in the study of the catalyst layer (CL). Gas diffusion through porous media is critical for the high current density operation of a PEMFC, where the electrochemical reaction becomes rate-limited by the diffusive flux of reactants reaching reaction sites. However, geometric models that predict diffusivity of the GDL have been identified as inaccurate in current literature. Experimental results give a better estimate of diffusivity, but published works to date have been limited by high measurement uncertainty. In this thesis, the effective diffusivity of various GDLs are measured using a modified Loschmidt cell and the relative differences between GDLs are explained using scanning electron microscopy and the method of standard porosimetry. The experimental results from this study and others in current literature are used to develop a generalized correlation for predicting diffusivity as a function of porosity in the through-plane direction of a GDL. The thermal conductivity and contact resistance of porous media are important for accurate thermal analysis of a fuel cell, especially at high current densities where the heat flux becomes large. In this thesis, the effective through-plane thermal conductivity and contact resistance of the GDL and MPL are measured. GDL samples with and without a MPL and coated with 30%-wt. PTFE are measured using the guarded steady-state heat flow technique described in the ASTM standard E 1225-04. Thermal contact resistance of the MPL with the iron clamping surface was found to be negligible, owing to the high surface contact area. Thermal conductivity and thickness of the MPL remained constant for compression pressures up to 15bar at 0.30W/m°K and 55μm, respectively. The thermal conductivity of the GDL substrate containing 30%−wt. PTFE varied from 0.30 to 0.56W/m°K as compression was increased from 4 to 15bar. As a result, the GDL contain- ing MPL had a lower effective thermal conductivity at high compression than the GDL without MPL. At low compression, differences were negligible. The constant thickness of the MPL suggests that the porosity, as well as heat and mass transport properties, remain independent of the inhomogeneous compression by the bipolar plate. Despite the low effective thermal conductivity of the MPL, thermal performance of the GDL can be improved by exploiting the excellent surface contact resistance of the MPL while minimizing its thickness.
9

Investigation of Surface Properties and Heterogeneity in Gas Diffusion Layers for Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cells

Fishman, J. Zachary 31 December 2010 (has links)
The development of improved water management strategies for the polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) could stand to benefit from an improved understanding of the surface and internal structure of the gas diffusion layer (GDL). The GDL is a fibrous porous material enabling mass transport between the PEMFC catalyst layer and flow fields. Fluorescence-based visualizations of liquid water droplet evaporation on GDL surfaces were performed to investigate water droplet pinning behaviours. The heterogeneous in-plane and through-plane porosity distributions of untreated GDLs were studied using computed tomography visualizations. The through-plane porosity distributions were utilized to calculate heterogeneous local tortuosity, relative diffusivity, and permeability distributions. Finally, the heterogeneous through-plane porosity distributions of GDLs treated for increased hydrophobicity were investigated. This work provides new insight into GDL material properties to better inform future PEMFC models.
10

Investigation of Surface Properties and Heterogeneity in Gas Diffusion Layers for Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cells

Fishman, J. Zachary 31 December 2010 (has links)
The development of improved water management strategies for the polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) could stand to benefit from an improved understanding of the surface and internal structure of the gas diffusion layer (GDL). The GDL is a fibrous porous material enabling mass transport between the PEMFC catalyst layer and flow fields. Fluorescence-based visualizations of liquid water droplet evaporation on GDL surfaces were performed to investigate water droplet pinning behaviours. The heterogeneous in-plane and through-plane porosity distributions of untreated GDLs were studied using computed tomography visualizations. The through-plane porosity distributions were utilized to calculate heterogeneous local tortuosity, relative diffusivity, and permeability distributions. Finally, the heterogeneous through-plane porosity distributions of GDLs treated for increased hydrophobicity were investigated. This work provides new insight into GDL material properties to better inform future PEMFC models.

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