Patents by Inventor Carl Reiser

Carl Reiser has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20070111882
    Abstract: A fuel cell (40) includes first and second catalysts (12?), (14?) secured to opposed surfaces of an electrolyte (16?); a first flow field (26?) secured in fluid communication with the first catalyst (12?) defining a plurality of flow channels (30A?, 30B?, 30C?, 30D?) between a plurality of ribs (32A?, 32B?, 32C?, 32D?, 32E?) of the first flow field (26?); and a backing layer (42) secured between the first flow field (26?) and the first catalyst (12?). The backing layer (42) includes a carbon black, a hydrophobic polymer, and randomly-dispersed carbon fibers (44). The carbon fibers (44) are at least twice as long as a width (46) of the flow channels (30A?, 30B?, 30C?, 30D?) defined in the adjacent first flow field (26?). The backing layer (42) replaces a known substrate (22) and diffusion layer (18).
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 13, 2006
    Publication date: May 17, 2007
    Inventor: Carl Reiser
  • Publication number: 20060280995
    Abstract: In a fuel cell stack, an inlet fuel distributor (15, 31, 31a, 31b) comprises a plurality of fuel distributing passageways (17-23, 40-47, 64) of substantially equal length and equal flow cross section to uniformly distribute fuel cell inlet fuel from a fuel supply conduit (13, 14, 50) to a fuel inlet manifold (28). The conduits may be either channels (40-47; 64) formed within a plate (39) or tubes (17-23). The channels may have single exits (65) or double exits (52, 53) into the fuel inlet manifold.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 18, 2006
    Publication date: December 14, 2006
    Inventors: John Whiton, Yu Wang, Carl Reiser, George Hirko
  • Patent number: 7147945
    Abstract: The invention is a system (10) and method for determining a gas composition within a fuel cell (12) of a shut down fuel cell power plant. The system (10) includes at least one fuel cell (12), a sensor circuit (86) secured in electrical connection with the fuel cell (12), wherein the circuit (86) includes a power source (88), a voltage-measuring device (90), and a sensor circuit switch (92). The circuit (86) is secured so that the power source (88) may selectively deliver a pre-determined sensing current to the fuel cell (12) for a pre-determined sensing duration. The system (10) selectively admits the reducing fluid into an anode flow field (28) of the cell (12) whenever the sensor circuit (86) senses that a shut down monitoring voltage of the fuel cell (12) is the same as or exceeds a calibrated sensor voltage limit of the fuel cell (12).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 16, 2002
    Date of Patent: December 12, 2006
    Assignee: UTC Fuel Cells, LLC
    Inventors: Ryan J. Balliet, Carl A. Reiser
  • Patent number: 7141324
    Abstract: The invention is a hydrogen passivation shut down system for a fuel cell power plant (10). An anode flow path (24) is in fluid communication with an anode catalyst (14) for directing hydrogen fuel to flow adjacent to the anode catalyst (14), and a cathode flow path (38) is in fluid communication with a cathode catalyst (16) for directing an oxidant to flow adjacent to the cathode catalyst (16) of a fuel cell (12). Hydrogen fuel is permitted to transfer between the anode flow path (24) and the cathode flow path (38). A hydrogen reservoir (66) is secured in fluid communication with the anode flow path (24) for receiving and storing hydrogen during fuel cell (12) operation, and for releasing the hydrogen into fuel cell (12) whenever the fuel cell (12) is shut down.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 29, 2005
    Date of Patent: November 28, 2006
    Assignee: UTC Fuel Cells, LLC
    Inventors: Paul R. Margiott, Francis R. Preli, Jr., Galen W. Kulp, Michael L. Perry, Carl A. Reiser, Ryan J. Balliet
  • Publication number: 20060154190
    Abstract: The medium (9), such as water, of a container (10), such as a fuel cell accumulator, is kept above freezing by a hydrogen/oxygen catalytic combustor (13) fed hydrogen from a source comprising a mechanical thermostatic valve (25) in thermal communication (26) with the container (10) and connected to a hydrogen supply (28). The combustor may comprise an ejector (32) having hydrogen through its primary inlet (31) drawing air through a secondary inlet (33). The combustor may comprise a diffusion combustor having a catalyst (38) spaced from a heating surface (30) and a diffusion control plate (40) low partial pressure of oxygen at the catalyst causing diffusion through the barrier. Water vapor from combustion condenses on a surface (146) and is led by hydrophilic woven carbon paper (126) to wicking material (133), which has smaller pores than the carbon paper, which leads the water downwardly, through a disk (140) and plugs (147) to atmospheric air.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 29, 2004
    Publication date: July 13, 2006
    Inventors: Carl Reiser, Kazuo Saito, James Cameron
  • Publication number: 20060141331
    Abstract: Fuel cells (38) have water passageways (67; 78, 85; 78a, 85a) that provide water through reactant gas flow field plates (74, 81) to cool the fuel cell. The water passageways may be vented to atmosphere (99), by a porous plug (69), or pumped (89, 146) with or without removing any water from the passageways. A condenser (59, 124) receives reactant air exhaust, may have a contiguous reservoir (64, 128), may be vertical, (a vehicle radiator, FIG. 2), may be horizontal, contiguous with the top of the fuel cell stack (37, FIG. 5), or below (124) the fuel cell stack (120). The passageways may be grooves (76, 77; 83, 84) or may comprise a plane of porous hydrophilic material (78a, 85a) contiguous with substantially the entire surface of one or both of the reactant gas flow field plates. Air flow in the condenser may be controlled by shutters (155). The condenser may be a heat exchanger (59a) having freeze-proof liquid flowing through a coil (161) thereof, the amount being controlled by a valve (166).
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 19, 2005
    Publication date: June 29, 2006
    Inventors: Carl Reiser, Jeremy Meyers, David Johnson, Craig Evans, Robert Darling, Tommy Skiba, Ryan Balliet
  • Publication number: 20060141330
    Abstract: Fuel cells (38) have minute water passageways (67) that provide water through one or both reactant gas flow field plates (74, 82) of each fuel cell, whereby the fuel cell is cooled convectively. The water passageways (67; 78, 85; 78a, 85a) may be vented by a porous plug (69), or by a microvacuum pump (89) that does not pump any water from the passageways, or simply vented (99) to atmosphere. A condenser (59) may have a contiguous reservoir (64); the condenser (59) may be vertical, such as a vehicle radiator (FIG. 1), or may be horizontal, contiguous with the top of the fuel cell stack (37, FIG. 5). The passageways may be grooves (76, 77; 83, 84) in the reactant gas flow plates (75, 81) or the passageways may comprise a plane of porous hydrophilic material (78a, 85a) contiguous with substantially the entire surface of one or both of the reactant gas flow field plates.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 29, 2004
    Publication date: June 29, 2006
    Inventors: Carl Reiser, Jeremy Meyers, David Johnson, Craig Evans, Robert Darling, Tommy Skiba
  • Patent number: 7056609
    Abstract: A method for operating a fuel cell stack assembly having a plurality of fuel cells arranged in a stack to define opposed end fuel cells, wherein the plurality of fuel cells include intermediate fuel cells between the opposed end fuel cells, including feeding fuel and oxidant to the intermediate fuel cells whereby the at least one end fuel cell transports hydrogen across the cell and produces heat.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 25, 2003
    Date of Patent: June 6, 2006
    Assignee: UTC Fuel Cells, L.L.C.
    Inventors: Carl A. Reiser, Gennady Resnick
  • Publication number: 20060093879
    Abstract: A procedure for starting up a fuel cell system that is disconnected from its primary load and that has air in both its cathode and anode flow fields includes a) connecting an auxiliary resistive load across the cell to reduce the cell voltage; b) initiating a recirculation of the anode flow field exhaust through a recycle loop and providing a limited flow of hydrogen fuel into that recirculating exhaust; c) catalytically reacting the added fuel with oxygen present in the recirculating gases until substantially no oxygen remains within the recycle loop; disconnecting the auxiliary load; and then d) providing normal operating flow rates of fuel and air into respective anode and cathode flow fields and connecting the primary load across the cell. The catalytic reaction may take place on the anode or within a catalytic burner disposed within the recycle loop.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 20, 2005
    Publication date: May 4, 2006
    Inventors: Deliang Yang, Margaret Steinbugler, Richard Sawyer, Leslie Van Dine, Carl Reiser
  • Publication number: 20060083963
    Abstract: The invention is a hydrogen passivation shut down system for a fuel cell power plant (10). An anode flow path (24) is in fluid communication with an anode catalyst (14) for directing hydrogen fuel to flow adjacent to the anode catalyst (14), and a cathode flow path (38) is in fluid communication with a cathode catalyst (16) for directing an oxidant to flow adjacent to the cathode catalyst (16) of a fuel cell (12). Hydrogen fuel is permitted to transfer between the anode flow path (24) and the cathode flow path (38). A hydrogen reservoir (66) is secured in fluid communication with the anode flow path (24) for receiving and storing hydrogen during fuel cell (12) operation, and for releasing the hydrogen into fuel cell (12) whenever the fuel cell (12) is shut down.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 29, 2005
    Publication date: April 20, 2006
    Inventors: Paul Margiott, Francis Preli, Galen Kulp, Michael Perry, Carl Reiser, Ryan Balliet
  • Publication number: 20060078780
    Abstract: The invention is a hydrogen passivation shut down system for a fuel cell power plant (10). An anode flow path (24) is in fluid communication with an anode catalyst (14) for directing hydrogen fuel to flow adjacent to the anode catalyst (14), and a cathode flow path (38) is in fluid communication with a cathode catalyst (16) for directing an oxidant to flow adjacent to the cathode catalyst (16) of a fuel cell (12). Hydrogen fuel is permitted to transfer between the anode flow path (24) and the cathode flow path (38). A hydrogen reservoir (66) is secured in fluid communication with the anode flow path (24) for receiving and storing hydrogen during fuel cell (12) operation, and for releasing the hydrogen into fuel cell (12) whenever the fuel cell (12) is shut down.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 22, 2005
    Publication date: April 13, 2006
    Inventors: Paul Margiott, Francis Preli, Galen Kulp, Michael Perry, Carl Reiser, Ryan Balliet
  • Patent number: 6986958
    Abstract: A PEM fuel cell system (19) has a multifunction oxidant manifold (98) disposed contiguously beneath a fuel cell stack (20), serving as coolant accumulator (28). An electric heater (45) is powered by the fuel cell electrical output (47, 51) during frozen startup. Auxiliary pump (54) and conduits (55, 57, 58) forces water (28) above oxidant pressure in upper coolant manifold (41), into the oxidant flow fields to be warmed before flowing from the oxidant exhaust to the accumulator to melt additional ice. Alternatively, melted coolant is forced by oxidant pressure into coolant channels for heating. Conduit (61) conducts coolant from the coolant flow fields to the accumulator. A condensing heat exchanger (65) embedded in accumulator coolant receives oxidant exhaust. A condensing heat exchanger (70) has cold inlet air (75) and warm moist oxidant exhaust (72) on opposite sides, condensing liquid into the accumulator.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 6, 2003
    Date of Patent: January 17, 2006
    Assignee: UTC Fuel Cells, LLC
    Inventors: Carl A. Reiser, Frederick F. Sribnik
  • Patent number: 6984464
    Abstract: The invention is a hydrogen passivation shut down system for a fuel cell power plant (10). An anode flow path (24) is in fluid communication with an anode catalyst (14) for directing hydrogen fuel to flow adjacent to the anode catalyst (14), and a cathode flow path (38) is in fluid communication with a cathode catalyst (16) for directing an oxidant to flow adjacent to the cathode catalyst (16) of a fuel cell (12). Hydrogen fuel is permitted to transfer between the anode flow path (24) and the cathode flow path (38). A hydrogen reservoir (66) is secured in fluid communication with the anode flow path (24) for receiving and storing hydrogen during fuel cell (12) operation, and for releasing the hydrogen into fuel cell (12) whenever the fuel cell (12) is shut down.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 6, 2003
    Date of Patent: January 10, 2006
    Assignee: UTC Fuel Cells, LLC
    Inventors: Paul R. Margiott, Francis R. Preli, Jr., Galen W. Kulp, Michael L. Perry, Carl A. Reiser, Ryan J. Balliet
  • Patent number: 6977121
    Abstract: A fuel cell power plant (10) having a fuel concentration sensor cell (54) is disclosed for detecting a concentration of fuel in a fuel cell (12) of the plant (10). A portion of a fuel exhaust stream is directed to flow through the sensor cell (54) adjacent to a membrane electrode assembly (60) of the sensor cell (54). A power circuit (62) may or may not deliver an electrical current to the cell (12), while changes in voltage across the cell (12) that are proportional to changes in hydrogen concentrations within the fuel exhaust stream are detected by a detector (68) which communicates the changes to a controller (108) for controlling a rate of fuel supply to the fuel cell (12). A porous sensor water transport plate (74) cools, humidifies delivers and removes liquid from the sensor cell (12).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 3, 2003
    Date of Patent: December 20, 2005
    Assignee: UTC Fuel Cells, LLC
    Inventors: Ryan J. Balliet, Thomas D. Jarvi, Lars M. Pedersen, Michael L. Perry, Carl A. Reiser
  • Publication number: 20050249990
    Abstract: Recycle fuel gas is provided (36) to an impeller (34, 34a) for application to the input (24) of the anode flow fields of a fuel cell stack (25). The impeller may be an ejector (34) having its primary input (33) connected to a source (11) of hydrogen and its secondary input (35) connected to the outlet (27, 37) of the fuel cells anode flow fields. The ejector outlet provides the minimum fuel flow required at the lowest power rating. The impeller may be an electrochemical hydrogen pump (34a) with a constant current generator (50) providing for a substantially constant recycle flow (the highest not more than double the lowest), and one pressure regulator (20) providing minimum flow of fresh fuel to the fuel inlets of the first stack. Pressure regulators (20, 21) control the amount of fresh fuel to the anode flow fields for power in excess of minimum power.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 4, 2004
    Publication date: November 10, 2005
    Inventor: Carl Reiser
  • Publication number: 20050164069
    Abstract: Fuel cell power plants (19, 47, 60, 86, 102, 112, 121) include recycle fuel from a fuel exit (29) of the last fuel flow field (23, 52, 64, 89) of a series of flow fields (20-23; 49-52; 61-64; 87-89) labeled M?N through M, applied either to the Mth flow fields or both the Mth and the (M?1)th flow fields. The fuel recycle impeller is a blower (30), a turbocompressor (30a) driven by an air exhaust, an ejector (30b) or an electrochemical hydrogen pump (30c). Fuel from a source (77) may be applied both to the first fuel flow field (87) and an additional fuel flow field (88, 74, 75, 89) of a series of flow fields to reduce pressure drop and flow rate requirements in the first of the series of flow fields and assure more fuel in the additional fuel flow field. Flow to the additional fuel flow field may be controlled by voltage (126) in such field or fuel content (128) of its exhaust. Transient fuel volume is provided by a tank (125).
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 27, 2004
    Publication date: July 28, 2005
    Inventors: Paul Margiott, Michael Perry, Carl Reiser, Michael Vukovinsky
  • Publication number: 20050164050
    Abstract: The direction of flow of purged fuel reactant gas (20) is sensed (38, 39, 44, 53, 54) to ensure it flows outwardly from a fuel cell stack (9) towards the ambient (21). If the purged fuel reactant. gas is not flowing outwardly, a signal (39) causes a controller (26) to open the circuit (35) thereby disconnecting the electrical load (33) from the fuel cell stack.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 27, 2004
    Publication date: July 28, 2005
    Inventor: Carl Reiser
  • Publication number: 20050147855
    Abstract: A procedure for starting up a fuel cell system that is disconnected from its primary load and has both its cathode and anode flow fields filled with air includes initiating a flow of air through the cathode flow field and rapidly displacing the air in the anode flow field by delivering a flow of fresh hydrogen containing fuel into the anode flow field, and thereafter connecting the primary load across the cell. Sufficiently fast purging of the anode flow field with hydrogen prior to connecting the cells to the load eliminates the need for purging the anode flow field with an inert gas, such as nitrogen, upon start-up.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 5, 2005
    Publication date: July 7, 2005
    Inventors: Carl Reiser, Deliang Yang, Richard Sawyer
  • Publication number: 20050142432
    Abstract: A fuel cell (40) includes first and second catalysts (12?), (14?) secured to opposed surfaces of an electrolyte (16?); a first flow field (26?) secured in fluid communication with the first catalyst (12?) defining a plurality of flow channels (30A?, 30B?, 30C?, 30D?) between a plurality of ribs (32A?, 32B?, 32C?, 32D?, 32E?) of the first flow field (26?); and a backing layer (42) secured between the first flow field (26?) and the first catalyst (12?). The backing layer (42) includes a carbon black, a hydrophobic polymer, and randomly-dispersed carbon fibers (44). The carbon fibers (44) are at least twice as long as a width (46) of the flow channels (30A?, 30B?, 30C?, 30D?) defined in the adjacent first flow field (26?). The backing layer (42) replaces a known substrate (22) and diffusion layer (18).
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 29, 2003
    Publication date: June 30, 2005
    Inventor: Carl Reiser
  • Publication number: 20050129999
    Abstract: An inlet fuel distributor (10-10d) has a permeable baffle (39, 54, 54a, 60) between a fuel supply pipe (11, 83) and a fuel inlet manifold (12, 53, 53a, 63) causing fuel to be uniformly distributed along the length of the fuel inlet manifold. A surface (53, 68) may cause impinging fuel to turn and flow substantially omnidirectionally improving its uniformity. Recycle fuel may be provided (25, 71) into the flow downstream of the fuel inlet distributor. During startup, fuel or inert gas within the inlet fuel distributor and the fuel inlet manifold may be vented through a valve (57, 86) in response to a controller (58, 79) so as to present a uniform fuel front to the inlets of the fuel flow fields (58).
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 15, 2003
    Publication date: June 16, 2005
    Inventors: James Geschwindt, Robin Guthrie, George Hirko, Jeremy Meyers, Carl Reiser, Javier Resto, Yu Wang, John Whiton