Long-term evolution of mechanical performance of solid oxide fuel cell stack and the underlying mechanism

2021 
Abstract Mechanical performance analysis is important for ensuring the long-term reliability of solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs). Thermal-mechanical models are constructed to conduct time-dependent mechanical performance analysis of SOFC stack with temperature field obtained by multiphysics modeling. The volume-averaged temperature field is used as comparison. The creep strains are examined with a time step of 10 h for 10,000 h. It reveals: (1) Uniform temperature significantly decreases the stresses, strains, failure probabilities of all stack components. (2) The failure probability of sealant reduced rapidly and the sealant becomes mechanically safer for long-term operation. (3) Creep strain is dominant for anode/sealant/interconnect, but negligible for electrolyte/cathode. All components are predictably safe against strain failure for 100,000 h (4) Creep strains of stack components interact with each other. Coupled analysis of creep strains of anode/sealant/interconnect is mandatory, but the creep strains of electrolyte/cathode may be neglected for studying mechanical evolutions.
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