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A Membrane-Type Humidifier for Fuel Cell Applications: Controller Design, Analysis and Implementation

Paper no. FuelCell2008-65257 pp. 841-850 (10 pages)
doi:10.1115/FuelCell2008-65257

ASME 2008 6th International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology (FUELCELL2008)
June 16–18, 2008 , Denver, Colorado, USA
Sponsor: Nanotechnology Institute
ASME 2008 6th International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology
ISBN: 0-7918-4318-1

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Author(s):
Denise A. McKay
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI

Anna G. Stefanopoulou
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI

Jeffrey Cook
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
A membrane-based gas humidification apparatus was employed to actively manage the water vapor entrained in the reactant gas supplied to a fuel cell stack. The humidification system utilizes a gas bypass and a series of heaters to achieve accurate and fast humidity and temperature control. A change in fuel cell load induces a reactant mass flow rate disturbance to this humidification system. If not well regulated, this disturbance creates undesirable condensation and evaporation dynamics, both to the humidification system and the fuel cell stack. Therefore, controllers were devised, tuned and employed for temperature reference tracking and disturbance rejection. The coordination of the heaters and the bypass valve is challenging during fast transients due to the different time scales, the actuator constraints, and the sensor responsiveness. Two heater controller types were explored: on-off (thermostatic) and variable (proportional integral), to examine the ability of the feedback system to achieve the control objectives with minimal hardware and software complexity. This controller tuning methodology is useful for optimizing response time versus heater parasitic losses.

©2008 ASME

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