|
SAE J2594 Design for Recycling Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) Fuel Cell Systems Published United States & Other Locales |
|
|
|
|
| Organization |
Society
of Automotive Engineers |
|
|
|
| Identification |
SAE J 2594 Recyclability Working Group Recommended Practices to Design for Recycling PEM Fuel Cell Systems |
| Mission |
Guidance document that
incorporates and summarizes existing recyclability
measurement techniques and identify recyclability
issues
associated with fuel cells in end-of-life vehicles. |
|
|
|
| Scope |
In 1999, the Society of
Automotive Engineers established a Committee for Fuel Cell Standards. The
Committee is organized in subcommittees that address issues such as
Safety, Performance, and Recycling. The mission of the Recycling
Subcommittee is to develop a recommended practice document that
incorporates existing recycling practices and identifies technical and
environmental sustainability issues and applies them to proton exchange
membrane (PEM) fuel cell (FC) systems. Recyclability is best considered
early in the product engineering design/development process. The design
engineer should be concerned with the product after its useful life and
adopt a mindset of designing for disassembly and recycling.
The purpose of this SAE
Recommended Practice document is to provide a tool that helps the FC
system designers and engineers incorporate recyclability into the PEM FC
design process. This document was derived by considering existing
recycling recommended practices then applying them to assess and evaluate
the recyclability of the PEM FC system. This document should be used to
continually assess the recyclability of component and assembly designs
during the early design phase, in order to reach optimized recyclability,
recycled content, and minimized environmental impact associated with those
designs. This document defines a PEM FC rating system that assesses the
ease of removal of the PEM FC system and/or components from a vehicle;
then upon removal from the vehicle, the ease of recycling those components
and materials. The derived rating is used as a PEM FC component
design tool for continual improvement opportunities and not for purposes
of calculating recyclability of the entire vehicle. While other trade-offs
such as mass, piece-cost, volume, etc. must also be considered when
designing these systems, they are not discussed in this document.
|
|
|
|
| Status |
Published in September 2011. (Originally issued in 2003.)
Available at www.sae.org. |
|
|
|