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1.
A fuel processor was constructed which incorporated two burners with direct steam generation by water injection into the burner exhaust. These burners with direct water vaporization enabled rapid fuel processor start-up for automotive fuel cell systems. The fuel processor consisted of a conventional chain of reactors: auto-thermal reformer (ATR), water gas shift (WGS) reactor and preferential oxidation (PrOx) reactor. The criticality of steam to the fuel reforming process was illustrated. By utilizing direct vaporization of water, and hydrogen for catalyst light-off, excellent start performance was obtained with a start time of 20 s to 30% power and 140 s to full power.  相似文献   

2.
《Journal of power sources》2006,160(1):505-509
KIER has been developing a novel fuel processing system to provide hydrogen rich gas to residential PEMFCs system. For the effective design of a compact hydrogen production system, each unit process for steam reforming and water gas shift, has a steam generator and internal heat exchangers which are thermally and physically integrated into a single packaged hardware system. The newly designed fuel processor (prototype II) showed a thermal efficiency of 78% as a HHV basis with methane conversion of 89%. The preferential oxidation unit with two staged cascade reactors, reduces, the CO concentration to below 10 ppm without complicated temperature control hardware, which is the prerequisite CO limit for the PEMFC stack. After we achieve the initial performance of the fuel processor, partial load operation was carried out to test the performance and reliability of the fuel processor at various loads. The stability of the fuel processor was also demonstrated for three successive days with a stable composition of product gas and thermal efficiency. The CO concentration remained below 10 ppm during the test period and confirmed the stable performance of the two-stage PrOx reactors.  相似文献   

3.
《Journal of power sources》2002,112(2):484-490
A 25-kW on-board methanol fuel processor has been developed. It consists of a methanol steam reformer, which converts methanol to hydrogen-rich gas mixture, and two metal membrane modules, which clean-up the gas mixture to high-purity hydrogen. It produces hydrogen at rates up to 25 N m3/h and the purity of the product hydrogen is over 99.9995% with a CO content of less than 1 ppm. In this fuel processor, the operating condition of the reformer and the metal membrane modules is nearly the same, so that operation is simple and the overall system construction is compact by eliminating the extensive temperature control of the intermediate gas streams. The recovery of hydrogen in the metal membrane units is maintained at 70–75% by the control of the pressure in the system, and the remaining 25–30% hydrogen is recycled to a catalytic combustion zone to supply heat for the methanol steam-reforming reaction. The thermal efficiency of the fuel processor is about 75% and the inlet air pressure is as low as 4 psi. The fuel processor is currently being integrated with 25-kW polymer electrolyte membrane fuel-cell (PEMFC) stack developed by the Hyundai Motor Company. The stack exhibits the same performance as those with pure hydrogen, which proves that the maximum power output as well as the minimum stack degradation is possible with this fuel processor. This fuel-cell ‘engine’ is to be installed in a hybrid passenger vehicle for road testing.  相似文献   

4.
《Journal of power sources》2005,145(2):702-706
An integrated microchannel methanol processor was developed by assembling unit reactors, which were fabricated by stacking and bonding microchannel patterned stainless steel plates, including fuel vaporizer, heat exchanger, catalytic combustor and steam reformer. Commercially available Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalyst was coated inside the microchannel of the unit reactor for steam reforming. Pt/Al2O3 pellets prepared by ‘incipient wetness’ were filled in the cavity reactor for catalytic combustion. Those unit reactors were integrated to develop the fuel processor and operated at different reaction conditions to optimize the reactor performance, including methanol steam reformer and methanol catalytic combustor. The optimized fuel processor has the dimensions of 60 mm × 40 mm × 30 mm, and produced 450sccm reformed gas containing 73.3% H2, 24.5% CO2 and 2.2% CO at 230–260 °C which can produce power output of 59 Wt.  相似文献   

5.
《Journal of power sources》2006,159(2):979-986
Sulfonic acid modified perfluorocarbon polymer proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells operated at elevated temperatures (120–150 °C) can greatly alleviate CO poisoning on anode catalysts. However, fuel cells with these PEMs operated at elevated temperature and atmospheric pressure typically experience low relative humidity (RH) and thus have increased membrane and electrode resistance. To operate PEM fuel cells at elevated temperature and high RH, work is needed to pressurize the anode and cathode reactant gases, thereby decreasing the efficiency of the PEM fuel cell system. A liquid-fed hydrocarbon-fuel processor can produce reformed gas at high pressure and high relative humidity without gas compression. If the anode is fed with this high-pressure, high-relative humidity stream, the water in the anode compartment will transport through the membrane and into the ambient pressure cathode structure, decreasing the cell resistance. This work studied the effect of anode pressurization on the cell resistance and performance using an ambient pressure cathode. The results show that high RH from anode pressurization at both 120 and 150 °C can decrease the membrane resistance and therefore increase the cell voltage. A cell running at 150 °C obtains a cell voltage of 0.43 V at 400 mA cm−2 even with 1% CO in H2. The results presented here provide a concept for the application of a coupled steam reformer and PEM fuel cell system that can operate at 150 °C with reformate and an atmospheric air cathode.  相似文献   

6.
《Journal of power sources》2006,158(1):428-435
To examine the feasibility of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC)-powered unmanned undersea vehicle (UUV), a system level analysis is presented that projects a possible integration of the SOFC stack, fuel steam reformer, fuel/oxidant storage and balance of plant components into a 21-in. diameter UUV platform. Heavy hydrocarbon fuel (dodecane) and liquid oxygen (LOX) are chosen as the preferred reactants. A maximum efficiency of 45% based on the lower heating value of dodecane was calculated for a system that provides 2.5 kW for 40 h. Heat sources and sinks have been coupled to show viable means of thermal management. The critical design issues involve proper recycling of exhaust steam from the fuel cell back into the reformer and effective use of the SOFC stack radiant heat for steam reformation of the hydrocarbon fuel.  相似文献   

7.
This paper investigates the effects of various fuels on hydrogen production for automotive PEM fuel cell systems. Gasoline, methanol, ethanol, dimethyl ether and methane are compared for their effects on fuel processor size, start-up energy and overall efficiencies for 50 kWe fuel processors. The start-up energy is the energy required to raise the temperature of the fuel processor from ambient temperature (20 °C) to that of the steady-state operating temperatures. The fuel processor modeled consisted of an equilibrium-ATR (autothermal), high-temperature water gas shift (HTS), low-temperature water gas shift (LTS) and preferential oxidation (PrOx) reactors. The individual reactor volumes with methane, dimethyl ether, methanol and ethanol were scaled relative to a gasoline-fueled fuel processor meeting the 2010 DOE technical targets. The modeled fuel processor volumes were, 25.9 L for methane, 30.8 L for dimethyl ether, 42.5 L for gasoline, 43.7 L for ethanol and 45.8 L for methane. The calculated fuel processor start-up energies for the modeled fuels were, 2712 kJ for methanol, 3423 kJ for dimethyl ether, 6632 kJ for ethanol, 7068 kJ for gasoline and 7592 kJ for methane. The modeled overall efficiencies, correcting for the fuel processor start-up energy using a drive cycle of 33 miles driven per day, were, 38.5% for dimethyl ether, 38.3% for methanol, 37% for gasoline, 34.5% for ethanol and 33.2% for methane assuming a steady-state efficiency of 44% for each fuel.  相似文献   

8.
To lower vehicle greenhouse gas emissions, many automotive companies are exploring fuel cell technologies, which combine hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity and water. While hydrogen storage and infrastructure remain issues, Renault and Nuvera Fuel Cells are developing an onboard fuel processor, which can convert a variety of fuels into hydrogen to power these fuel cell vehicles.The fuel processor is now small enough and powerful enough for use on a vehicle. The catalysts and heat exchangers occupy 80 l and can be packaged with balance of plant controls components in a 150-l volume designed to fit under the vehicle. Recent systems can operate on gasoline, ethanol, and methanol with fuel inputs up to 200 kWth and hydrogen efficiencies above 77%. The startup time is now less than 4 min to lower the CO in the hydrogen stream to the target value for the fuel cell.  相似文献   

9.
Effective thermal integration could enable the use of compact fuel processors with PEM fuel cell-based power systems. These systems have potential for deployment in distributed, stationary electricity generation using natural gas. This paper describes a concept wherein the latent heat of vaporization of H2O is used to control the axial temperature gradient of a fuel processor consisting of an autothermal reformer (ATR) with water gas shift (WGS) and preferential oxidation (PROX) reactors to manage the CO exhaust concentration. A prototype was experimentally evaluated using methane fuel over a range of external heat addition and thermal inputs. The experiments confirmed that the axial temperature profile of the fuel processor can be controlled by managing only the vapor fraction of the premixed reactant stream. The optimal temperature profile is shown to result in high thermal efficiency and a CO concentration less than 40 ppm at the exit of the PROX reactor.  相似文献   

10.
In this paper, the first experimental investigations on a pre-commercial natural gas steam reformer have been presented. The fuel processor unit contains the elements as follows: desulfurizer, steam reformer reactor, CO shift converter, CO preferential oxidation (PROX) reactor, steam generator, burner and heat exchangers.The fuel processor produces 45 Nl/min of syngas in which the hydrogen concentration is about 75 vol.% and the other chemical species are nitrogen, carbon dioxide and methane. The CO concentration is below 1 ppmv, so that this reforming system is suitable for the integration with a PEM fuel cell stack.The experimental activity has been conducted in a test station, properly designed to measure the behaviour of the fuel processor. The laboratory test facility is equipped by a National Instruments Compact DAQ real-time data acquisition and control system running Labview™ software. Several measurement instruments and controlling devices have been installed. Furthermore, a gas chromatograph is used to measure the product gas composition during the tests.The aim of this work has been to analyze the behaviour of this pre-commercial steam reforming unit during its operation cycle in different operating conditions (full and partial loads) in order to study its integration with a PEM fuel cell for developing a high efficiency microcogeneration system for residential applications.  相似文献   

11.
《Journal of power sources》2004,137(2):206-215
We evaluated the performance of system combining a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) stack and a polymer electrolyte fuel cell (PEFC) stack by a numerical simulation. We assume that tubular-type SOFCs are used in the SOFC stack. The electrical efficiency of the SOFC–PEFC system increases with increasing oxygen utilization rate in the SOFC stack. This is because the amount of exhaust heat of the SOFC stack used to raise the temperature of air supplied to it decreases as its oxygen utilization rate increases and because that used effectively as the reaction heat of the steam reforming reaction of methane in the stack reformer increases. The electrical efficiency of the SOFC–PEFC system at 190 kW ac is 59% (LHV), which is equal to that of the SOFC-gas turbine combined system at 1014 kW ac.  相似文献   

12.
《Journal of power sources》2005,145(2):675-682
Due to the increasing demand for electrical power in today's passenger vehicles, and with the requirements regarding fuel consumption and environmental sustainability tightening, a fuel cell-based auxiliary power unit (APU) becomes a promising alternative to the conventional generation of electrical energy via internal combustion engine, generator and battery. It is obvious that the on-board stored fuel has to be used for the fuel cell system, thus, gasoline or diesel has to be reformed on board. This makes the auxiliary power unit a complex integrated system of stack, air supply, fuel processor, electrics as well as heat and water management. Aside from proving the technical feasibility of such a system, the development has to address three major barriers:start-up time, costs, and size/weight of the systems. In this paper a packaging concept for an auxiliary power unit is presented. The main emphasis is placed on the fuel processor, as good packaging of this large subsystem has the strongest impact on overall size.The fuel processor system consists of an autothermal reformer in combination with water–gas shift and selective oxidation stages, based on adiabatic reactors with inter-cooling. The configuration was realized in a laboratory set-up and experimentally investigated. The results gained from this confirm a general suitability for mobile applications. A start-up time of 30 min was measured, while a potential reduction to 10 min seems feasible. An overall fuel processor efficiency of about 77% was measured. On the basis of the know-how gained by the experimental investigation of the laboratory set-up a packaging concept was developed. Using state-of-the-art catalyst and heat exchanger technology, the volumes of these components are fixed. However, the overall volume is higher mainly due to mixing zones and flow ducts, which do not contribute to the chemical or thermal function of the system. Thus, the concept developed mainly focuses on minimization of those component volumes. Therefore, the packaging utilizes rectangular catalyst bricks and integrates flow ducts into the heat exchangers. A concept is presented with a 25 l fuel processor volume including thermal isolation for a 3 kWel auxiliary power unit. The overall size of the system, i.e. including stack, air supply and auxiliaries can be estimated to 44 l.  相似文献   

13.
《Journal of power sources》2006,156(2):489-496
In the last few years, a renewed interest in the water gas shift (WGS) reaction at low temperature has arisen due to its application to fuel cells.In this work, a simulation of a fixed bed reactor for this reaction, which forms part of a hydrogen production–purification train for a 10 kW PEM fuel cell using ethanol as the raw material, was carried out. A commercial Cu/Zn/Ba/Al2O3 catalyst was employed and a one-dimensional heterogeneous model was applied for the simulation. The catalyst deactivation due to thermal factors (sintering) was taken into account in the model. Isothermal and adiabatic regimes were analyzed as well.Results of the simulation indicate that the pellet can be considered isothermal but temperature gradients in the film cannot be disregarded. On the other hand, concentration gradients in the film can be ignored but CO profiles are established inside the pellet. Adiabatic operation can be recommended because of its simplicity of operation and construction. The reactor volume is strongly sensitive to the CO outlet concentration at CO levels lower than 6000 ppm. For a 10 kW PEM fuel cell, using adequate pellet size and taking into account the catalyst deactivation, a reactor volume of 0.64 l would be enough to obtain an outlet CO concentration of about 7160 ppm. This concentration value can be handled by the next purification stage, COPROX.  相似文献   

14.
The cogeneration of heat and power by means of a fuel cell based CHP unit is a promising option for efficient residential power supply. For most applications natural gas is used as fuel. One main component of such a CHP unit is a fuel processor in order to generate hydrogen from the natural gas with hydrogen thermal power output of about 6 kW. Usually the steam reforming process is used for hydrogen production. In order to meet the heat demand of the endothermic steam reforming process the fuel processor is equipped with a burner, which has to work with natural gas during start up phase and mainly with the low calorific anodic off gas of the fuel cell stack during normal operation.The presented work is focused on aspects of the main pollutant emissions (carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxide) of burners integrated into the reformer. Experimental investigations of two different burners, which were developed and adapted to the steam reformer requirements, in a real fuel processor environment show, that it is possible to operate both burner concepts with high and low calorific gases with very low pollutant emissions in order to compete with emissions of current heating boilers, which are in the range of 15 mg kWh−1 for CO and of 20 mg kWh−1 for NOx by adjusting suitable excess air ratios in the range of 1.2-1.4.But it is also demonstrated, that the efficiency of the fuel processor is influenced by the excess air ratio. An increase of the air ratio from 1.05 to 1.45 leads to an decrease of the efficiency from 80% to 76%. This results in a conflict of objectives between low pollutant emissions and high system efficiencies. The choice of a suitable burner concept and the definition of a suitable operation strategy can be based on the presented results. Additionally, aspects like fuel processor geometry, flame monitoring, pressure drop in the burner feed gas line as well as in the flue gas duct, investment costs and safety items have also to be considered for the burner selection.  相似文献   

15.
《Journal of power sources》2007,173(2):935-942
Fuel cell power for locomotives combines the environmental benefits of a catenary-electric locomotive with the higher overall energy efficiency and lower infrastructure costs of a diesel-electric. A North American consortium, a public–private partnership, is developing a prototype hydrogen-fueled fuel cell-battery hybrid switcher locomotive for urban and military-base rail applications. Switcher locomotives are used in rail yards for assembling and disassembling trains and moving trains from one point to another. At 127 tonnes (280,000 lb), continuous power of 250 kW from its (proton exchange membrane) PEM fuel cell prime mover, and transient power well in excess of 1 MW, the hybrid locomotive will be the heaviest and most powerful fuel cell land vehicle yet. This fast-paced project calls for completion of the vehicle itself near the end of 2007. Several technical challenges not found in the development of smaller vehicles arise when designing and developing such a large fuel cell vehicle. Weight, center of gravity, packaging, and safety were design factors leading to, among other features, the roof location of the lightweight 350 bar compressed hydrogen storage system. Harsh operating conditions, especially shock loads during coupling to railcars, require component mounting systems capable of absorbing high energy. Vehicle scale-up by increasing mass, density, or power presents new challenges primarily related to issues of system layout, hydrogen storage, heat transfer, and shock loads.  相似文献   

16.
The present study is aimed at integrating a power system for reformer, PrOx and PEM fuel cells using a simulation model. A three-dimensional numerical model is established for predicting the effects of channel patterns and the inlet and outlet manifold configuration with a fixed inlet flow rate on a reformer. Distributions of velocity, gases concentrations and current density are predicted, and the methanol conversion ratios are evaluated as well. In addition, the mole fraction of CO is contained and removed in the reformer and PrOx reactions, respectively. The solution model is used to improve the design of both the micro reformer and the fuel cell. Results showed that a CO mole fraction can be decreased through the PrOx reaction effectively; furthermore, the methanol conversion ratio and the concentration of hydrogen can be improved from 83% to 99% and from 67.11% to 74.4%, respectively. Additionally, the relative standard deviations of velocity in channels are decreased from 58.68% to 0.048%, according to the manifold configuration design; from the point of view of a fuel cell, high fuel usage and current density are obtained using a z-serpentine channel pattern. The current density is increased by 184% on the basis of inlet flow rate for a steam reformer from Design 1 to Design 2.  相似文献   

17.
A new fuel processor approach for portable fuel cell power sources significantly improves upon microreformers by overcoming the difficulties with heat deficiencies and contaminants in the product hydrogen. Instead of reforming, the processor uses methanol decomposition to enable the byproduct, carbon monoxide (CO), to be used as the heat source. A hydrogen permselective membrane segregates the CO for combustion in an integrated burner, maximizes the decomposition conversion, and provides pure hydrogen for a fuel cell. Discharging the CO-rich retentate through an ejector to draw combustion air into the burner greatly simplifies the system. High and stable hydrogen yields are attained with optimized catalysts and fuel compositions. The resultant simple, efficient, and self-heating processor produces 85% of the hydrogen content of the fuel. A 20 W autonomous power source based on this novel fuel processor demonstrates a fuel energy density >1.5 Wh g?1(electrical), nearly twice as high as microreformer power sources.  相似文献   

18.
《Journal of power sources》2006,162(2):1265-1269
A 75-kW methanol reforming fuel cell system, which consists of a fuel cell system and a methanol auto-thermal reforming fuel processor has been developed at Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). The core of the fuel cell system is a group of CO tolerant PEMFC stacks with a double layer composite structured anode. The fuel cell stacks show good CO tolerance even though 140 ppm CO was present in the reformate stream during transients. The auto-thermal reforming (ATR) fuel cell processor could adiabatically produce a suitable reformate without external energy consumption. The output of hydrogen-rich reformate was approximately 120 N m3 h−1 with a H2 content near 53% and the CO concentrations generally were under 30 ppm. The fuel cell system was integrated with the methanol reforming fuel processor and the peak power output of the fuel cell system exceeded 75 kW in testing. The hydrogen utilization approached 70% in the fuel cell system.  相似文献   

19.
The use of hydrocarbon fed fuel cell systems including a fuel processor can be an entry market for this emerging technology avoiding the problem of hydrogen infrastructure. This article presents a 1 kW low temperature PEM fuel cell system with fuel processor, the system is fueled by a mixture of methanol and water that is converted into hydrogen rich gas using a steam reformer. A complete system model including a fluidic fuel processor model containing evaporation, steam reformer, hydrogen filter, combustion, as well as a multi-domain fuel cell model is introduced. Experiments are performed with an IDATECH FCS1200™ fuel cell system. The results of modeling and experimentation show good results, namely with regard to fuel cell current and voltage as well as hydrogen production and pressure. The system is auto sufficient and shows an efficiency of 25.12%. The presented work is a step towards a complete system model, needed to develop a well adapted system control assuring optimized system efficiency.  相似文献   

20.
《Journal of power sources》2006,157(2):641-649
The main objectives of this study are to develop the economic models and their characterization trends for the common unit processes and utilities in the fuel cell system. In this study, a proton electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) system is taken as a case study. The overall system consists of five major units, namely auto-thermal reformer (ATR), water gas shift reactor (WGS), membrane, pressure swing adsorber (PSA) and fuel cell stack. Besides that, the process utilities like compressor, heat exchanger, water adsorber are also included in the system. From the result, it is determined that the specific cost of a PEM fuel cell stack is about US$ 500 per kW, while the specific manufacturing and capital investment costs are in the range of US$ 1200 per kW and US$ 2900 per kW, respectively. Besides that the electricity cost is calculated as US$ 0.04 kWh. The results also prove that the cost of PEM fuel cell system is comparable with other conventional internal engine.  相似文献   

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