Purdue Energy Center Fuel Cell Project PI: H' Cooper - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 8
About This Presentation
Title:

Purdue Energy Center Fuel Cell Project PI: H' Cooper

Description:

Purdue Energy Center. Fuel Cell Project. PI: H. Cooper. Item Descriptions. I1-I7. What is Power? ... One way to make Hydrogen is to separate it from Water ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:36
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 9
Provided by: david2548
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Purdue Energy Center Fuel Cell Project PI: H' Cooper


1
Purdue Energy CenterFuel Cell ProjectPI H.
Cooper
  • Item Descriptions
  • I1-I7

2
What is Power?
I1
  • Power is something that is created using a power
    source.
  • The wind is a power source when the wind blows,
    leaves move.
  • The sun is a power source in the form of heat. On
    cloudy days, the suns rays are blocked and so
    people on earth feel less heat.

3
One way to make Hydrogen is to separate it from
Water
I2
  • Lightning can naturally split water into hydrogen
    and oxygen.
  • Electrolyzers use electricity to split water into
    hydrogen gas and oxygen gas.
  • Hydrogen is produced on the cathode and oxygen is
    produced on the anode. The hydrogen is then
    stored in a fuel tank and the oxygen is released
    back into the atmosphere.

H2O
H2O
H
H
H
H
O
O
H
H
O
O
H
H
Hydrogen Gas
Oxygen Gas
4
Hydrogen Cycle
I3
Renewable Energy provides electricity.
Image Courtesy Schatz Energy Research Center
Humboldt State University
Electrolyzers use the electricity to split water
into hydrogen and oxygen.
The Fuel Cell splits hydrogen to produce
electricity.
5
Here we use sunlight to make, Clean, Renewable
Electricity
I4
  • Solar panels use silicon wafers to generate
    electricity directly from sunlight.

The electricity then travels down the wires to
power the light bulb.
6
Fuel Cell Learning Module
I5
  • Use the track ball to navigate through the fuel
    cell module to learn about how hydrogen is
    produced, how a fuel cell operates, and some of
    the current and future applications for fuel
    cells.

7
Fuel Cell Operation
I6
  • As hydrogen molecules enter the anode, the
    catalyst causes them to split into electrons (e-)
    and ions (H). The electrons flow can through the
    wire as electricity which causes the light to
    come on. Meanwhile the (H) ions flow through the
    membrane. When the electrons (e-) and ions (H)
    meet oxygen at the cathode, water (H2O) is
    produced along with heat.

Adding stacks together provides more power.
Images Courtesy Los Alamos National Labs
8
Fuel Cell Applications
I7
  • Fuel cells have been tested in all the items on
    this display, but they are more practical for
    some uses because of space and weight concerns.
  • Hydrogen as a fuel takes up more space than an
    equal amount of gasoline and the tank that holds
    hydrogen fuel is often heavier than a gasoline
    tank.

Image Courtesy General Motors Corp.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com