Research Images
Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cells

Redox Flow Batteries
(Some) Current Areas of Research
Fuel cells: a type of electrochemical energy conversion device, used to transform a chemical fuel and an oxidising agent (typically hydrogen and oxygen, respectively) into electricity, through a pair of redox reactions.
e.g. Acidic H2 Fuel Cell: (Anode) H2 -> 2H+ + 2e- (Cathode) 1/2O2 + 2H+ + 2e- -> H2O |
e.g. Alkaline H2 Fuel Cell: (Anode) H2 + 2OH- -> 2H2O + 2e- (Cathode) 1/2O2 + H2O + 2e- -> 2OH- |
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Our group performs work on low temperature (PEM, polymer electrolyte membrane) fuel cells including proton and hydroxide conducting membrane materials1. Work is associated with understanding the electrocatalysis of the oxygen reduction and hydrogen oxidation reactions at the catalyst level through advanced electrochemical modelling2-5. In concert with this we are also interested in understanding the limitations imposed by mass transport of reactants through the catalyst layer. We have developed a range of new approaches to characterise fuel cells4,6-11. These aspects all come together in studies associated with reducing the loading of platinum group metals in the layers through either reduced loading electrodes or non-precious metal electrocatalysts. Finally, issues associated with degradation of fuel cell components12 through corrosion or poisoning of catalysts are considered along with amelioration approaches for allowing fuel cells to operate with impure fuels13 or in the presence of impure air14,15. Work in our group has been spun out into the company Bramble Energy which considers production of fuel cells (and other electrochemical devices) using printed circuit board technology16-18.
- Anion-exchange membranes in electrochemical energy systems - Varcoe JR, et al., Energy Environ. Sci., 2014, 7, 3135-3191.
- Optimizing Oxygen Reduction Catalyst Morphologies from First Principles - Ahmad EA, et al., J. Phys. Chem. C, 2015, 119 (29), 16804–16810.
- General Models for the Electrochemical Hydrogen Oxidation and Hydrogen Evolution Reactions: Theoretical Derivation and Experimental Results under Near Mass-Transport Free Conditions - Kucernak AR, Zalitis C, J. Phys. Chem. C, 2016, 120 (20), 10721-10745.
- A catalyst layer optimisation approach using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy for PEM fuel cells operated with pyrolysed transition metal-N-C catalysts - Malko D, et al., J. Power Sources, 2016, 323, 189-200.
- Performance measurements and modelling of the ORR on fuel cell electrocatalysts - the modified double trap mode - Markiewicz M, et al., Electrochim. Acta, 2015, 179, 126-136.
- What Happens Inside a Fuel Cell? Developing an Experimental Functional Map of Fuel Cell Performance - Brett DJL, et al., ChemPhysChem, 2010, 11, 2714-2731.
- Investigation of convective transport in the gas diffusion layer used in polymer electrolyte fuel cells - Beruski O, et al., Phys. Rev. Fluids, 2017, 2, 103501.
- Assessing the performance of reactant transport layers and flow fields towards oxygen transport: A new imaging method based on chemiluminescence - Lopes T, et al., J. Power Sources, 2015, 274, 382-392.
- Thin solid state reference electrodes for use in solid polymer electrolytes - Smith G, et al., Electrochem. commun., 2014, 43, 43-46.
- Advanced Diagnostics Applied to a Self-Breathing Fuel Cell - Obeisun OA, et al., ECS Trans., 2014, 61, 249-258.
- Spatially resolved diagnostic methods for polymer electrolyte fuel cells: a review - Kalyvas C, et al., WIREs Energy Environ., 2014, 3, 254-275.
- Influence of microporous layer on corrosion of metallic bipolar plates in fuel cells - Castanheira L, et al., J. Power Sources, 2019, 418, 147-151.
- Gas phase recovery of hydrogen sulfide contaminated polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells - Kakati BK, Kucernak ARJ, J. Power Sources, 2014, 252, 317-326.
- Recovery of Polymer Electrolyte Fuel Cell exposed to sulphur dioxide - Kakati BK, et al., Int. J. Hydrog. Energy, 2016, 41, 5598-5604.
- Using corrosion-like processes to remove poisons from electrocatalysts: a viable strategy to chemically regenerate irreversibly poisoned polymer electrolyte fuel cells - Kakati BK, et al., Electrochim. Acta, 2016, 222, 888-897.
- Anode ink formulation for a fully printed flexible fuel cell stack - Hakola L, et al., Flex. Print. Electron., 2020, 5, 025002.
- Development of open-cathode polymer electrolyte fuel cells using printed circuit board flow-field plates: Flow geometry characterisation - Obeisun OA, et al., Int. J. Hydrog. Energy, 2014, 39, 18326-18336.
- Current collector design for closed-plenum polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells - Daniels FA, et al., J. Power Sources, 2014, 249, 247-262.
Recent Talks/Interviews

2023-05-23: Colleen Jackson, IDRIC
Dr Colleen Jackson discussing green hydrogen and the co-production of an alternative oxidant.
Interview with Dr Colleen Jackson, who works on the IDRIC project: MIP 7.2, about research into 'electrolysis for green hydrogen and co-produced chemicals at scale'.
More information on her project can be found on the IDRIC website: IDRIC MIP7.2

2023-04-17: Anthony Kucernak, Eko zona HRT
Prof. Anthony Kucernak discussing hydrogen and fuel cells on Croatian TV.
Interview with Professor Anthony Kucernak discussing the role of hydrogen and fuel cells in the transition towards renewable energy.
Anthony was interviewed on Croatian television program 'Eko zona' (Eco-zone).

2023-03-30: Anthony Kucernak, XII RCGI Colloquium
Prof. Anthony Kucernak discussing the storage of renewable energy at scale (RFBs and H2).
Professor Anthony Kucernak presenting the 'Storage of renewable energy at scale - the role of flow batteries and hydrogen'.
Anthony presented at the XII RCGI Colloquium: 'Energy storage at large scale for the energy transition and beyond' arranged by the Research Centre for Greenhouse Gas Innovation.

2021-11-03: Anthony Kucernak, RSC Panel Discussion
Prof. Anthony Kucernak joins an RSC panel discussion: the chemistry of hydrogen production and use.
Professor Anthony Kucernak joins Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) panel discussion on 'The Chemistry of Hydrogen Production and Use'.
This panel, held in the run up to COP26, discusses the replacement of fossil fuels in power, transport and industry. (More info can be found on the RSC website: 'Chemistry and COP26'.)
Chair - Sue Nelson
Prof Anthony Kucernak, Imperial College London
Prof Francis Livens, University of Manchester
Prof Edman Tsang, University of Oxford
Dr Sam French, Johnson Matthey
Fiona Landy, University of St Andrews
Links
Contact Details
Prof. Anthony Kucernak
G22B
Molecular Sciences Research Hub (MSRH)
Imperial College London
White City Campus
London
W12 0BZ
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0)20 7594 5831
Fax: +44 (0)20 7594 5804
Email: anthony@imperial.ac.uk