A viable membrane reactor option for sustainable hydrogen production from ammonia
- Authors
- Jo, Young Suk; Cha, Junyoung; Lee, Chan Hyun; Jeong, Hyangsoo; Yoon, Chang Won; Nam, Suk Woo; Han, Jonghee
- Issue Date
- 1-10월-2018
- Publisher
- ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
- Keywords
- Hydrogen production; Ammonia dehydrogenation; Fuel cell; Membrane reactor; Sustainable energy conversion
- Citation
- JOURNAL OF POWER SOURCES, v.400, pp.518 - 526
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- JOURNAL OF POWER SOURCES
- Volume
- 400
- Start Page
- 518
- End Page
- 526
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/72524
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2018.08.010
- ISSN
- 0378-7753
- Abstract
- Conventional hydrogen production from ammonia is both energy and process intensive, requiring high temperature and independent purification units. Here, we present a compact process of energy conversion from NH3 to electricity using a novel membrane reactor, comprised of a dense metallic Pd/Ta composite membrane and Ru/La-Al2O3 pellet catalysts, and a fuel cell unit. The fabricated Pd/Ta composite membrane, having ca. 5 times higher H-2 permeability than conventional Pd-Ag membranes, can both lower NH3 dehydrogenation temperature and completely remove an additional hydrogen purification unit. Compared to a packed-bed reactor without membrane, ammonia conversion improves by 75 and 45%, respectively at 425 and 400 degrees C, and > 99.5% of conversion is achieved at 450 degrees C under pressurized ammonia feed of 6.5 bar. Main barriers of practical application of Pd/Group V metals as a composite hydrogen permeable membrane, embrittlement and durability issues, are overcome owing to pertinent operating temperatures (400-450 degrees C) of ammonia dehydrogenation coupled with membrane separation. Finally, as-separated hydrogen with < 1 ppm of NH3 is provided directly to a polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell, showing no performance degradation for an extended time of operation. The combined results suggest a feasible and less energy/process intensive option for producing hydrogen or electricity from ammonia.
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Collections - Graduate School > GREEN SCHOOL (Graduate School of Energy and Environment) > 1. Journal Articles
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