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Robotic Assembly of Fuel Cells Could Hasten Hydrogen Economy
Troy, N.Y. — Echoes of a “hydrogen economy” are
reverberating across the country, but a number of roadblocks
stand in the way. One of the biggest, experts say, is the high
cost of manufacturing fuel cells. A new research project at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute aims to tackle the challenge
of mass production by using robots to assemble fuel cell
stacks.
The project, which will combine the resources of
Rensselaer’s Flexible Manufacturing Center (FMC) and Center for
Automation Technologies and Systems (CATS), was recently
supported with a major research equipment award from the
Robotics Industries Association (RIA). As one of four
universities selected in a nationwide competition, Rensselaer
will receive three new industrial robot systems to help develop
a flexible robotic process to produce fuel cell stacks.
“The U.S. Department of Energy has suggested that the cost
of manufacturing fuel cells is the single biggest obstacle on
the road to the hydrogen economy,” says Raymond Puffer,
co-director of the FMC. “We are addressing a component that
represents a major portion of the total systems cost: the stack
assembly in a proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell.”
In a PEM fuel cell, hydrogen is split into protons and
electrons on one side of a thin polymer membrane. The membrane
allows protons to pass through, but electrons are forced to go
around, creating a flow of electrical current. On the other
side of the membrane, the electrons recombine with the protons
and with oxygen from the air, creating water and heat as the
only byproducts. To produce enough energy for most
applications, multiple fuel cells are combined in a fuel cell
stack.
“It is currently common to take as long as a full day to
assemble and leak-test a single stack,” says Stephen Derby,
FMC’s other co-director. “To be commercially viable, stack
assembly must be accomplished in minutes, not hours.”
Derby, Puffer, and their colleagues already have applied
their expertise in automating manufacturing processes through a
collaboration with PEMEAS, a supplier of high-temperature
membrane electrode assemblies (MEAs) for PEM fuel cells. In
2002 the researchers developed a fully automated $5 million MEA
pilot manufacturing line at the company’s plant in Frankfurt,
Germany, where these MEAs were formerly put together by
hand.
To begin addressing the PEM stack assembly process, the
researchers plan to create a flexible robotic “workcell,” which
will include various pieces of robotic equipment designed to
handle materials with great precision. The RIA award includes
three full industrial robot systems, donated by the Kuka Robot
Group, and collision-avoidance sensors for the systems,
provided by RAD, a robotics accessories supplier.
“Many of the materials in PEM stacks are thin, flexible,
soaked in corrosive acids, or highly sensitive to changes in
humidity and temperature,” Puffer says. “This makes material
handling orders of magnitude more difficult than methods used
for simple flexible materials such as paper.” The researchers
will use existing automated methods to gain a deeper
understanding of how PEM stack materials respond to various
handling techniques, while also researching new ways to sense
material properties throughout the process.
The project will play an important role in Rensselaer’s new
interdisciplinary program to train doctoral students in fuel
cell science and engineering. The program is supported by a
$3.2 million, first-of-its-kind fuel cell research education
grant from the National Science Foundation combined with a $1.6
million investment by Rensselaer.
Additional research support will be sought from federal
agencies as well as an industry consortium, with the goal of
increasing the understanding of the PEM stack assembly process
across the entire robotics industry. The researchers will give
a final report in two years at the next International Robots
& Vision Conference in 2007.
For more information about Rensselaer’s focus on fuel cells,
check out the latest issue of the Rensselaer Research Review:http://www.rpi.edu/research/magazine/fall05/index.html
And to learn about energy security research at Rensselaer
visit: http://www.rpi.edu/research/energy/
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Published
November 8,
2005 |
Contact: Jason Gorss
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: gorssj@rpi.edu |
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