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Solar Power And Chemical Energy Systems

An Implementing Agreement of the International Energy Agency

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STCH – High Efficiency Generation of Hydrogen Fuels Using Solar Thermochemical Water Splitting


Participants:

  • University of Nevada Las Vegas (UNLV)

  • University of Colorado (CU)

  • Sandia National Laboratories (SNL)

  • National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)

  • Argonne National Laboratory (ANL)

  • General Atomics (GA) (USA)

  • Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich, CH)

Contact:

Funding:  
  • U.S. DOE funded project, cost shared: $9,084k

Duration:

  • June 25, 2003 - December 31, 2006, continuing

 

Transport reactor for ZnO dissociation: ZnO → Zn + ½O2. Left: Measured product gas concentration at 1900 K and residence time of less than 1 second .
Right: Al2O3 tube (9 cm ID x 46 cm long).

TEM of core-shell structure of partially reacted zinc in short residence time transport tube reactor with steam.

Background

Hundreds of thermochemical cycles have been proposed to split water. The feasibility of these processes can be assessed through thermodynamic analysis and experimentation. There is a need to evaluate these cycles in order to identify the most feasible and economical for further investigation. The most promising cycles should be demonstrated.

Objectives

The main objective of the STCH project is to identify a cost-competitive solar-powered water-splitting process for hydrogen production. Up to three processes will be demonstrated, including on-sun experimentation.

Achievements in 2006

The cycle database and scoring are complete with 353 unique cycles evaluated. Twelve cycles have been found to be worthy of further experimental study. Five of those are currently under active study by STCH. These include: 1) zinc oxide and cadmium carbonate volatile metal oxide cycles; 2) sodium manganese and cobalt ferrite non-volatile metal oxide cycles; and 3) the hybrid copper chloride cycle. Metal sulfate cycles were eliminated from consideration when experiments indicated that no H2 was formed, as side reactions were more favorable.
The thermal dissociation of ZnO has been investigated in a laboratory electrically heated transport tube reactor at 1900 K. A refractory alumina tube was used to prevent competing carbothermal reduction from occurring. The concentrations of O2, CO, and CO2 are shown in ‎Figure 4.4, indicating that thermal dissociation of ZnO occurred. For residence times of less than 1 s, an overall 18% conversion of feed ZnO was dissociated to Zn metal. Product powder collected in a downstream cooled sampling system was analyzed at >40% conversion. Product powder collected in a final filter was mostly ZnO, but was formed by recombination of Zn(g) and O2 as indicated by the powder morphology – via surface area measurements and TEM analysis. Recombination and materials of construction for a reaction tube on-sun are the primary obstacles inhibiting scale-up of the ZnO dissociation step. The Zn hydrolysis reaction step was also evaluated using a transport tube operating at temperatures below the melting point of Zn. The conversion of Zn to ZnO was measured to be 28% for residence times of less than 1 second for process temperatures of 700 K (‎Figure 4.5). Cross-sectioned TEM analysis indicated that unreacted core Zn particles were enclosed in a shell of ZnO. Current research is focused on how to increase the conversion, overcoming reac-tion rate limitations. Thermogravimetric experiments indicate that complete conversion can be achieved with longer residence times.The cadmium carbonate cycle consisting of three steps is being evaluated: (1) Cd + CO2(g) + H2O → CdCO3 + H2(g); (2) CdCO3 → CdO + CO2(g); (3) CdO → Cd(g) + ½O2(g). Flow-sheet calcu-lations predict efficiency potentially as high as 59% (LHV). An experimental program was undertaken to investigate the H2 production step. No H2 was detected without a catalyst, i.e. ammonia supplied as NH4HCO3. The reaction mechanism is believed to progress via a Cd(NH3)n+2 complex. The final solid product was determined to be CdCO3. Key issues include the rate of reaction and the degree of conversion (without re-combination) that can be achieved to Cd in the high temper-ature solar step.
A cobalt-ferrite lattice structure on yttria stabilized zirconia (YSZ) was constructed and demonstrated for repeatable H2 production. The YSZ formulation, Co0.67Fe2.33O4 (3:1), was sintered at 1700 K and evaluated in water splitting cycles. Test data showing repeatable H2 production over 31 cycles are presented in ‎Figure 4.6. The structure is being incorporated into a Counter Rotating Ring Receiver Reactor Recuperator (CR5) thermo-chemical engine as depicted in ‎Figure 4.7. The CR5 uses recuperation of sensible heat to efficiently produce H2 in a two-step thermochemical process. Research is currently focused on evaluating the reaction kinetics on-sun, optimizing the reactive material composition, and performing additional durability testing and characterization.
Progress is also being made in the hybrid copper chloride and sodium manganese thermochemical cycles. The low-temperature Cu-Cl cycle shows promising efficiency (~40% LHV), but some critical data must be determined experimentally and are underway. The first step of the Mn2O3/MnO cycle has been demonstrated at near 90% conversion in 1 to 2 s residence times. The hydrogen generation step using NaOH is easily carried out. The real challenge is recovering NaOH in the process. Some modifications to the process are being evaluated.

Additional work is focused on development of a solid particle receiver that can achieve temperatures in excess of 1300 K. Falling ceramic particles are directly heated by concentrated solar energy. The complete solar interface includes two-tank storage and particle lift as well as a heat exchanger to couple the receiver to the thermochemical process. CFD modeling is being carried out to aid in the design. First-level component design has been completed and cold-flow testing has begun.

Finally, an advanced ultra-high temperature tower is being designed using multiple heliostat fields and secondary concen-trators and an accompanying cavity receiver. The baseline sys-tem includes a 200 m tower with 358,100 m2 of heliostats per field. The CPC secondary has a 23.5 degree acceptance anangle and a geometric concentration Cgeometric = 6.1. The overall solar concentration exceeds 7000 suns with 259 MWhth being delivered to drive the process. The system has been designed for Daggett, California (2679 kWh/m2 available; yearly delivered = 1990 kWh/m2). The system design, size and performance are being optimized.

 

Cast YSZ: Test data showing repeatable hydrogen production over 31 cycles (left). Cobalt-ferrite lattice structure after 31 cycles (right).

Counter Rotating Ring Receiver Reactor Recuperator (CR5) thermochemical engine. The device uses recuperation of sensible heat to efficiently produce H2 in a two-step thermochemical process.

Publication:

  • Francis T.M., Gump C.J., Weimer A.W. (2006) Spinning Wheel Powder Feeding Device – Fundamentals and Applications, Powder Technology 170, 36-44.

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