DocumentCode
1340048
Title
Hydrocarbonߝair fuel cell systems
Author
Peattie, C.Gordon
Author_Institution
Texas Instruments Incorporated
Volume
3
Issue
6
fYear
1966
fDate
6/1/1966 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
69
Lastpage
76
Abstract
The fuel cell is basically an energy-conversion device in which chemical energy is isothermally converted into dc electricity. Several types of fuel cell systems have been developed, including the hydrogen-oxygen system used in certain space missions, but many of them employ fuels that are expensive and not readily available. Considerable research and development work is being done on hydrocarbon-air systems, which use air and "real-world" fuels. In the direct-oxidation cells, the hydrocarbon fuel is oxidized directly at the fuel electrode. Because of reaction problems at the electrode, these cells are still in their early stages of development. In the indirect-oxidation cells, now in the systems engineering development stage, the hydrocarbon fuel is converted into an impure hydrogen, which may then be purified to a certain degree and injected into the fuel cell modules. Initial applications will probably be in the military, because of the fuel flexibility and ease of maintenance inherent in these fuel cell systems.
Keywords
Electrodes; Energy conversion; Fuel cells; Fuel economy; Hydrocarbons; Hydrogen; Petroleum; Power engineering and energy; Power generation economics; Space technology;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSPEC.1966.5219675
Filename
5219675
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