Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering University of
Notre Dame
Notre Dame, IN 46556, U.S.A. May 2, 2003/ - 156 p
This document was produced for a directed reading class at the University of Notre Dame. The class was a result of two students, Chris Rayment and Scott Sherwin, who were interested in leaing about fuel cells and two professors, Mihir Sen and Paul McGinn, who agreed to conduct the course.
The course consisted of weekly presentations on the written chapters. This report is a result of each weekly presentation. The course outline was determined by us, Chris and Scott, and evenly distributed between the two of us. The rst half of the course consisted of an introduction into fuel cells and the various types whereas the second half of the course consisted of applications and current research in the fuel cell eld. This is representative of the general layout of the report.
The goal of this report was to produce a document showing our work for the semester and also to make available to other students interested in fuel cells or taking an introductory fuel cell course.
We would like to thank Professor Mihir Sen and Professor Paul McGinn from the University of Notre Dame for their time and guidance in conducting this course.
Their knowledge and experience in Engineering was greatly bene cial to the success of this course and thus the report. Chris Rayment Scott Sherwin c Chris Rayment and Scott Sherwin
Notre Dame, IN 46556, U.S.A. May 2, 2003/ - 156 p
This document was produced for a directed reading class at the University of Notre Dame. The class was a result of two students, Chris Rayment and Scott Sherwin, who were interested in leaing about fuel cells and two professors, Mihir Sen and Paul McGinn, who agreed to conduct the course.
The course consisted of weekly presentations on the written chapters. This report is a result of each weekly presentation. The course outline was determined by us, Chris and Scott, and evenly distributed between the two of us. The rst half of the course consisted of an introduction into fuel cells and the various types whereas the second half of the course consisted of applications and current research in the fuel cell eld. This is representative of the general layout of the report.
The goal of this report was to produce a document showing our work for the semester and also to make available to other students interested in fuel cells or taking an introductory fuel cell course.
We would like to thank Professor Mihir Sen and Professor Paul McGinn from the University of Notre Dame for their time and guidance in conducting this course.
Their knowledge and experience in Engineering was greatly bene cial to the success of this course and thus the report. Chris Rayment Scott Sherwin c Chris Rayment and Scott Sherwin