Simultaneous mapping of temperature and hydration in proton exchange membrane of fuel cells using magnetic resonance imaging
Darshan Chalise, Shreyan Majumdar, David G. Cahill

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a non-invasive MRI technique to simultaneously map temperature and hydration in proton exchange membranes of fuel cells, overcoming limitations of previous methods by using chemical shift and diffusion imaging.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel MRI-based method combining chemical shift imaging and diffusion measurements to separately map hydration and temperature in PEMs.
Findings
Successful 16x16 pixel mapping with 1 mm resolution
Achieved 3-minute scan time for real-time monitoring
Hydration uncertainty within 15% and temperature resolution of 6 K
Abstract
The efficiency of a proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell depends on the mobility of protons in the PEM, which is determined by the hydration and temperature of the membrane. While optical techniques or neutron or x-ray scattering techniques may be used to study the inhomogeneities in hydration and temperature in PEMs, these techniques cannot provide 3 dimensional spatial resolution in measuring layered PEMs. Due to their ability to provide non-invasive 3D images, spin-lattice relaxation time (T1) and spin-spin relaxation time (T2) contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of protons in PEMs have been suggested as methods to map hydration in the fuel cells. We show that while T1 and T2 imaging may be used to map hydration in PEMs under isothermal conditions, proton T1 and T2 are also a function of temperature. For PEM fuel cells, where current densities are large and thermal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFuel Cells and Related Materials · Electron Spin Resonance Studies · Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications
