The geometry of a commercially available electrodes has been reconstructed via X-ray computed tomography and used as input for two-phase simulations. The study has unveiled different regimes responsible for water transport, occurring in the cell during operation and flooding of the electrode. At the pore-scale, the microstructuctural characteristic of the electrodes determine an unstable dynamics of water transport, which can be beneficial to the fast removal of water. A preferable design of the electrode would be characterised by a positive gradient in the pore sizes along the through-plane direction.
Results of this study have been published in:
Farzaneh, M., Ström, H., Zanini, F., Carmignato, S., Sasic, S., & Maggiolo, D. (2021). Pore-Scale Transport and Two-Phase Fluid Structures in Fibrous Porous Layers: Application to Fuel Cells and Beyond. Transport in Porous Media, 136(1), 245-270.
and have been disseminated at the following international scientific conferences:
The 72nd Annual Meeting of the American Physical Society’s Division of Fluid Dynamics (DFD), held in Seattle, Washington on November 23-26, 2019
INTERNATIONAL COUPLED PROBLEMS 2019, ECCOMAS \& IACM 8th edition of the International CONFERENCES Conference on Computational Methods for Coupled Problems in Science and Engineering, 3-5 June 2019 in Sitges, Spain.
The 10th International Conference on Multiphase Flow (ICMF), held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, May 19-24, 2019