Reformed methanol fuel cell


Reformed Methanol Fuel Cell or Indirect Methanol Fuel Cell systems are a subcategory of proton-exchange fuel cells where, the fuel, methanol, is reformed, before being fed into the fuel cell.
RMFC systems offer advantages over direct [methanol fuel cell] systems including higher efficiency, smaller cell stacks, less requirement on methanol purity, no water management, better operation at low temperatures, and storage at sub-zero temperatures because methanol is a liquid from and as there is no liquid methanol-water mixture in the cells which can destroy the membrane of DMFC in case of frost.
The reason for the high efficiency of RMFC in contrast to DMFC is that hydrogen containing gas is fed to the fuel cell stack instead of methanol and overpotential on anode is much lower for hydrogen than for methanol. The tradeoff is that RMFC systems operate at hotter temperatures and therefore need more advanced heat management and insulation. The waste products with these types of fuel cells are carbon dioxide and water.
Methanol is used as a fuel because it is naturally hydrogen dense and can be steam reformed into hydrogen at low temperatures compared to other hydrocarbon fuels. Additionally, methanol is naturally occurring, biodegradable, and energy dense.
RMFC systems consist of a fuel processing system, a fuel cell, a fuel cartridge, and the BOP.

Storage and Fuel Costs

The fuel cartridge stores the methanol fuel. Depending on the system design either 100% methanol or a mixture of methanol with up to 40 vol% water is usually used as fuel for the RMFC system. 100% methanol results in lower fuel consumption than water-methanol mixture but goes along with higher fuel cell system complexity for condensing of cathode moisture.
Fuel Costs for RMFC typically are about 0.4-1.1 USD/kWh resp. 0.45-1.3 USD/kWh. By comparison, for a hydrogen fueled Low Temperature-PEM fuel cell costs for conventional hydrogen are about 4.5-10 USD/kWh.

Fuel processing system (FPS) in

MethanolPartial oxidation/Autothermal reformingWater gas shift reaction →preferential oxidation
The methanol reformer converts methanol to H2 and CO2, a reaction that occurs at temperatures of 250 °C to 300 °C.

Fuel cell

→The membrane electrode assembly fuel cell stack produces electricity in a reaction that combines H2 and O2 and produces water as a byproduct. Usually Low Temperature Proton-exchange membrane fuel cell or High Temperature Proton-exchange membrane fuel cell is used for RMFC.

Fuel processing system (FPS) out

Tail gas combustor catalytic combustion afterburner or with a platinum-alumina catalystcondenser

Balance of plant

The balance of plant consists of any fuel pumps, air compressors, and fans required to circulate the gas and liquid in the system. A control system is also often needed to operate and monitor the RMFC.

State of development and commercial products

RMFC systems have reached an advanced stage of development. For instance, a small system developed by Ultracell for the United States military,, has met,, and performance goals set by the United States Army Communications-Electronics Research, Development and Engineering Center, and is commercially available.
Larger systems to 8 MW are also available for multiple applications, such as power plant generation, backup power generation, emergency power supply, auxiliary power unit and battery range extension.
In contrast to diesel or gasoline generators maintenance interval of RMFC systems is usually significantly longer as no exchange of oil-filters and other engine service parts is needed. So the use of RMFC in off-grid applications and remote areas is often preferred over diesel gensets.
Also other features as biodegradability of methanol, the possibility to use renewable methanol, low fuel costs, no emission of particlulate matter/NOx, low noise and a low fuel consumption are seen advantageous.
The electric vehicle sports car Gumpert Nathalie contains RMFC technology.
Danish company called Blue World Technologies is building the biggest plant in the world to produce indirect methanol fuel cell stacks for automotive applications.
CompanyCountryFuel Cell type Fuel
Blue World Technologies ApSDenmarkHT-PEM
CHEMTaiwanPEMmethanol-water mixture
Siqens GmbHGermanyHT-PEM100% methanol or methanol-water mixture
UltraCell LLCUSAmethanol-water mixture
Advent TechnologiesUSAHT-PEM