Systems and methods for providing fuel cell power to a data center
US-10203735-B2 · Feb 12, 2019 · US
US11757117B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11757117-B2 |
| Application number | US-202217823229-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Aug 30, 2022 |
| Priority date | Sep 3, 2021 |
| Publication date | Sep 12, 2023 |
| Grant date | Sep 12, 2023 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A system includes a fuel cell engine, a plurality of switching devices, and a controller. The fuel cell engine includes a plurality of fuel cell modules connected in series as a fuel cell string, and then a plurality of these strings connected in parallel. The switching device(s) are electrically coupled to bypass when required each module(s) and or disconnect each string(s). The decision whether a module(s) and/or string(s) are bypassed, disconnected, or left to operate is based on a sensory feedback that is input into the finite state machine and fault management process that are embedded within the fuel cell controller. The bypassing scheme at the module level is handled in a manner such that the remaining modules within a series string can provide continuous, uninterrupted flow of current to the end application.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A fuel cell bypass system comprising: a fuel cell system including a first fuel cell module, a second fuel cell module electrically connected in series with the first fuel cell module, and a third fuel cell module electrically connected in parallel with the first fuel cell module and the second fuel cell module, a switching device electrically coupled between the third fuel cell module and the first and second fuel cell modules; a controller configured to, in response to an output voltage of at least one of the first fuel cell module and the second fuel cell module being less than a threshold, operate to open the switching device in order to disconnect the first and second fuel cell modules from the third fuel cell module and provide continuous, uninterrupted flow of an output voltage from the third fuel cell module, and a diode electrically connected to the second fuel cell module and the switching device to prevent a reverse flow of current from the switching device toward the first and second fuel cell modules in response to the switching device being opened. 2. The bypass system of claim 1 , wherein each of the first fuel cell module, the second fuel cell module, and the third fuel cell module includes a plurality of fuel cells electrically connected with one another. 3. The bypass system of claim 1 , wherein the switching device is one of a contactor and a semiconductor switching device. 4. The bypass system of claim 3 , wherein the semiconductor switching device is one of a field effect transistor and a bipolar junction transistor. 5. The bypass system of claim 1 , further comprising a direct current DC-DC converter electrically connected to an output of the fuel cell system, wherein the output voltage of the third fuel cell module corresponds to a minimum input voltage of the DC-DC converter. 6. The bypass system of claim 1 , wherein, prior to the switching device being open, a total output voltage of the fuel cell system corresponds to a combination of the output voltage of the third fuel cell module and a sum of the output voltages of the first fuel cell module and the second fuel cell module. 7. The bypass system of claim 1 , wherein, in response to the switching device being open, a total output voltage of the fuel cell system corresponds to the output voltage of the third fuel cell module. 8. The bypass system of claim 1 , further comprising a fourth fuel cell module being electrically connected in series to the third fuel cell module. 9. The bypass system of claim 8 , wherein the fourth fuel cell module is electrically connected in parallel to the first and second fuel cell modules or includes a plurality of fuel cells electrically connected with one another. 10. The bypass system of claim 8 , wherein, prior to the switching device being open, a total output voltage of the fuel cell system corresponds to a combination of a sum of the output voltages of the third fuel cell module and the fourth fuel cell module and a sum of the output voltages of the first fuel cell module and the second fuel cell module, and in response to the switching device being open, the total output voltage of the fuel cell system corresponds to a sum of the output voltage of the third fuel cell module and the fourth fuel cell module. 11. The bypass system of claim 1 , wherein the switching device is configured to, when open, interrupt a flow of energy between a first end of the switching device and a second end of the switching device. 12. The bypass system of claim 1 , wherein the bypass system is comprised within a vehicle further including a traction motor, a voltage converter electrically coupled between an output of the fuel cell system comprised within the bypass system and an input of the traction motor, wherein the fuel cell system is electrically connected to provide an output voltage to operate the traction motor. 13. The bypass system of claim 12 , wherein the vehicle further comprises a high voltage battery adapted to store electrical energy generated by the fuel cell system. 14. The bypass system of claim 13 , wherein the electrical energy generated by the fuel cell system that is stored in the high voltage battery is used to power the traction motor. 15. The bypass system of claim 13 , wherein the vehicle further comprises a direct current DC-DC converter electrically coupled to an output of the fuel cell system and a traction inverter electrically coupled to an output of the DC-DC converter and an input of the traction motor, wherein the traction inverter is adapted to invert DC power supplied by at least one of the fuel cell system and the high voltage battery to AC power compatible with the traction motor.
Fuel cells · CPC title
being switching converters (H02J1/108, H02J1/12 take precedence) · CPC title
Shut-off or shut-down of fuel cells · CPC title
Fuel cells · CPC title
Application of hydrogen technology to transportation, e.g. using fuel cells · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.