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Joseph Nicholas

Joseph Nicholas Kochey, St. Petersburg, FL US

Patent application numberDescriptionPublished
20090047748ENHANCED SENSITIVITY NON-CONTACT ELECTRICAL MONITORING OF COPPER CONTAMINATION ON SILICON SURFACE - Methods of measuring copper impurities on a silicon surface are disclosed. In certain embodiments, copper is electrically activated by ultra-violet illumination of the surface at room temperature. Activation can enhance the copper contribution to surface recombination and to surface voltage which are measured in a non-contact manner using a ac-surface photovoltage and a vibrating Kelvin-probe, respectively. Differential measurements before and after activation enable the separations of the copper impurities from other surface contaminants.02-19-2009

Joseph Nicholas Lovria, Honeoye Falls, NY US

Patent application numberDescriptionPublished
20110087441ONLINE METHOD TO ESTIMATE HYDROGEN CONCENTRATION ESTIMATION IN FUEL CELL SYSTEMS AT SHUTDOWN AND STARTUP - A system and method for estimating the amount of hydrogen and/or nitrogen in a fuel cell stack and stack volumes at system start-up and shut-down. The method defines the fuel cell stack and stack volumes as discrete volumes including an anode flow-field and anode plumbing volume, a cathode flow-field volume and a cathode header and plumbing volume. The method estimates the amount of hydrogen and/or nitrogen in the anode flow-field and anode plumbing volume, the cathode flow-field volume and the cathode header and plumbing volume when the fuel cell system is shut down, during a first stage when the hydrogen partial pressure between the anode and cathode is not in equilibrium and during a second stage when the hydrogen partial pressure between the anode and cathode is in equilibrium by considering various flows into and out of the volumes.04-14-2011
20110143241FUEL CELL OPERATIONAL METHODS FOR OXYGEN DEPLETION AT SHUTDOWN - A method for creating an oxygen depleted gas in a fuel cell system, including operating a fuel cell stack at a desired cathode stoichiometry at fuel cell system shutdown to displace a cathode exhaust gas with an oxygen depleted gas. The method further includes closing a cathode flow valve and turning off a compressor to stop the flow of cathode air.06-16-2011
20110143243FUEL CELL OPERATIONAL METHODS FOR HYDROGEN ADDITION AFTER SHUTDOWN - A method for reducing the probability of an air/hydrogen front in a fuel cell stack is disclosed that includes closing anode valves for an anode side of the fuel cell stack to permit a desired quantity of hydrogen to be left in the anode side upon shutdown and determining a schedule to inject hydrogen during the time the fuel cell stack is shutdown. The pressure on an anode input line is determined and a discrete amount of hydrogen is injected into the anode side of the stack according to the determined schedule by opening anode input line valves based on the determined pressure along the anode input line so as to inject the hydrogen into the anode side of the stack.06-16-2011
20110183225OPTIMIZED CATHODE FILL STRATEGY FOR FUEL CELL - A method for controlling cathode air flow at system start-up by controlling a stack by-pass valve. The method includes determining a concentration of hydrogen in a cathode side of the fuel cell system. The method also includes determining a volumetric flow rate through a cathode compressor, determining a volumetric flow rate through the stack cathode and determining a fraction of volumetric flow rate through the cathode to the total flow through the compressor. The method determines a modeled hydrogen outlet concentration from the fuel cell stack based on the volumetric flow rate through the compressor, the fraction of volumetric flow rate through the compressor to the total flow through the compressor and the concentration of hydrogen in the cathode. The method uses a desired fraction of volumetric flow rate through the cathode and the total flow through the compressor to determine the position of the by-pass valve.07-28-2011
20110229781VARIABLE ANODE FLOW RATE FOR FUEL CELL VEHICLE START-UP - A fuel cell system is disclosed with a fuel cell stack having a plurality of fuel cells, the fuel cell stack including an anode supply manifold and an anode exhaust manifold, a sensor for measuring at least one of an environmental condition affecting the fuel cell stack and a characteristic of the fuel cell stack, wherein the sensor generates a sensor signal representing the measurement of the sensor; and a processor for receiving the sensor signal, analyzing the sensor signal, and controlling a flow rate of a fluid flowing into the anode supply manifold based upon the analysis of the sensor signal.09-22-2011
20110244348FEEDBACK CONTROL OF H2 INJECTION DURING PARK BASED ON GAS CONCENTRATION MODEL - A method for determining when to inject hydrogen gas into the anode side of a fuel cell stack associated with a fuel cell vehicle when the vehicle is off. The method includes estimating the concentration of hydrogen gas in the anode side of the fuel cell stack using a gas concentration model and determining if the estimated concentration of hydrogen gas is below a first predetermined threshold. If the estimated hydrogen gas is less than the threshold, then hydrogen gas is injected into the anode side from a hydrogen source. While the hydrogen gas is being injected, the method compares the estimated concentration of the hydrogen gas in the anode side to a desired concentration, and generates an error signal there between. If the error signal is greater than a second predetermined threshold, the algorithm continues to inject the hydrogen into the anode side of the fuel cell stack.10-06-2011
20110287327DETECTION OF SMALL ANODE LEAKS IN FUEL CELL SYSTEMS - A system and method for detecting small hydrogen leaks in an anode of a fuel cell system. The method includes determining that a shut-down sequence has begun, and if so, deplete the cathode side of a fuel cell stack of oxygen. The method then increases the pressure of the anode side of the fuel cell stack to a predetermined set-point, and monitors the pressure decay of the anode side of the stack. The method compares the rate of pressure decay to an expected pressure decay rate, and if the measured pressure decay rate exceeds the expected pressure decay rate by a certain threshold, determines that a potential leak exists.11-24-2011