Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > FEA analysis and modelling of thermal stress in...
View graph of relations

FEA analysis and modelling of thermal stress in SOFCs

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

FEA analysis and modelling of thermal stress in SOFCs. / Schlegl, Harald; Dawson, Richard James.
Proceedings of 12th European SOFC & SOE Forum 2016: Modelling, validation and optimisation: Cell & stack. 2016. p. 109-119.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Schlegl, H & Dawson, RJ 2016, FEA analysis and modelling of thermal stress in SOFCs. in Proceedings of 12th European SOFC & SOE Forum 2016: Modelling, validation and optimisation: Cell & stack. pp. 109-119.

APA

Schlegl, H., & Dawson, R. J. (2016). FEA analysis and modelling of thermal stress in SOFCs. In Proceedings of 12th European SOFC & SOE Forum 2016: Modelling, validation and optimisation: Cell & stack (pp. 109-119)

Vancouver

Schlegl H, Dawson RJ. FEA analysis and modelling of thermal stress in SOFCs. In Proceedings of 12th European SOFC & SOE Forum 2016: Modelling, validation and optimisation: Cell & stack. 2016. p. 109-119

Author

Schlegl, Harald ; Dawson, Richard James. / FEA analysis and modelling of thermal stress in SOFCs. Proceedings of 12th European SOFC & SOE Forum 2016: Modelling, validation and optimisation: Cell & stack. 2016. pp. 109-119

Bibtex

@inproceedings{3063660472ea47c18b852b2fbac22057,
title = "FEA analysis and modelling of thermal stress in SOFCs",
abstract = "Durability and reliability of anode supported SOFC stacks have proven unsatisfactory in large scale trials, showing rapid failure, thermal cycling intolerance and step change in electrochemical performance most likely related to mechanical issues. Monitoring and understanding the mechanical conditions in the stack especially during temperature changes can lead to improvements of the design and of the operating regime targeting maximum durability. Within this project modelling and simulation of thermal stresses within the different parts of the cells and the stack and the validation of this models play a keyrole and were performed in this work.The modelling and simulation of stress and strain have been carried out using the FEA software AbaqusTM. Model variations documented the importance of exact knowledge of material properties like Young{\textquoteright}s modulus, Poisson{\textquoteright}s ratio, thermal expansion coefficient, thermal conductivity and creep viscosity. The benefit of literature data for these properties is limited by the fact that all these properties are highly dependent on the composition of materials but also on details of the fabrication process like mixing, fabrication technique and sintering temperature and duration. The work presented here is an investigation into the modelling techniques which can be most efficiently applied to represent anodesupported solid oxide fuel cells and demonstrates the temperature gradient and constraint on the stresses experienced in a typical design.The work described in this paper is part of a project with the title “Noveld iagnostic tools and techniques for monitoring and control of SOFC stacks – understanding mechanical and structural change” and is a collaboration with Loughborough University and Imperial College in the UK and the POSTECH institute of new and renewable energy, the Korea Institute of Energy Research (KIER) and Hankook Oil in Korea.",
keywords = "SOFC, FEA, Simulation, fuel cell",
author = "Harald Schlegl and Dawson, {Richard James}",
year = "2016",
month = jul,
day = "5",
language = "English",
pages = "109--119",
booktitle = "Proceedings of 12th European SOFC & SOE Forum 2016",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - FEA analysis and modelling of thermal stress in SOFCs

AU - Schlegl, Harald

AU - Dawson, Richard James

PY - 2016/7/5

Y1 - 2016/7/5

N2 - Durability and reliability of anode supported SOFC stacks have proven unsatisfactory in large scale trials, showing rapid failure, thermal cycling intolerance and step change in electrochemical performance most likely related to mechanical issues. Monitoring and understanding the mechanical conditions in the stack especially during temperature changes can lead to improvements of the design and of the operating regime targeting maximum durability. Within this project modelling and simulation of thermal stresses within the different parts of the cells and the stack and the validation of this models play a keyrole and were performed in this work.The modelling and simulation of stress and strain have been carried out using the FEA software AbaqusTM. Model variations documented the importance of exact knowledge of material properties like Young’s modulus, Poisson’s ratio, thermal expansion coefficient, thermal conductivity and creep viscosity. The benefit of literature data for these properties is limited by the fact that all these properties are highly dependent on the composition of materials but also on details of the fabrication process like mixing, fabrication technique and sintering temperature and duration. The work presented here is an investigation into the modelling techniques which can be most efficiently applied to represent anodesupported solid oxide fuel cells and demonstrates the temperature gradient and constraint on the stresses experienced in a typical design.The work described in this paper is part of a project with the title “Noveld iagnostic tools and techniques for monitoring and control of SOFC stacks – understanding mechanical and structural change” and is a collaboration with Loughborough University and Imperial College in the UK and the POSTECH institute of new and renewable energy, the Korea Institute of Energy Research (KIER) and Hankook Oil in Korea.

AB - Durability and reliability of anode supported SOFC stacks have proven unsatisfactory in large scale trials, showing rapid failure, thermal cycling intolerance and step change in electrochemical performance most likely related to mechanical issues. Monitoring and understanding the mechanical conditions in the stack especially during temperature changes can lead to improvements of the design and of the operating regime targeting maximum durability. Within this project modelling and simulation of thermal stresses within the different parts of the cells and the stack and the validation of this models play a keyrole and were performed in this work.The modelling and simulation of stress and strain have been carried out using the FEA software AbaqusTM. Model variations documented the importance of exact knowledge of material properties like Young’s modulus, Poisson’s ratio, thermal expansion coefficient, thermal conductivity and creep viscosity. The benefit of literature data for these properties is limited by the fact that all these properties are highly dependent on the composition of materials but also on details of the fabrication process like mixing, fabrication technique and sintering temperature and duration. The work presented here is an investigation into the modelling techniques which can be most efficiently applied to represent anodesupported solid oxide fuel cells and demonstrates the temperature gradient and constraint on the stresses experienced in a typical design.The work described in this paper is part of a project with the title “Noveld iagnostic tools and techniques for monitoring and control of SOFC stacks – understanding mechanical and structural change” and is a collaboration with Loughborough University and Imperial College in the UK and the POSTECH institute of new and renewable energy, the Korea Institute of Energy Research (KIER) and Hankook Oil in Korea.

KW - SOFC

KW - FEA

KW - Simulation

KW - fuel cell

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SP - 109

EP - 119

BT - Proceedings of 12th European SOFC & SOE Forum 2016

ER -