Ambient Condition Alcohol Reforming To Hydrogen With Electricity Output

ZM Bhat, R Thimmappa, NC Dargily,A Raafik,AR Kottaichamy

ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING(2021)

Cited 2|Views3
No score
Abstract
"Hydrogen economy" could enable a carbon-neutral sustainable energy chain. However, issues with safety, storage, and transport of molecular hydrogen impede its realization. Alcohols as liquid H-2 carriers could be enablers, but state-of-the-art reforming is difficult, requiring high temperatures >200 degrees C and pressures >25 bar, and the resulting H-2 is carbonized beyond tolerance levels for direct use in fuel cells. Here, we demonstrate ambient temperature and pressure alcohol reforming in a fuel cell (ARFC) with a simultaneous electrical power output. The alcohol is oxidized at the alkaline anode, where the resulting CO2 is sequestrated as carbonate. Carbon-free H-2 is liberated at the acidic cathode. The neutralization energy between the alkaline anode and the acidic cathode drives the process, particularly the unusually high entropy gain (1.27-fold Delta H). The significantly positive temperature coefficient of the resulting electromotive force allows us to harvest a large fraction of the output energy from the surrounding, achieving a thermodynamic efficiency as high as 2.27. MoS2 as the cathode catalyst allows alcohol reforming even under open-air conditions, a challenge that state-of-the-art alcohol reforming failed to overcome. We further show reforming of a wide range of alcohols. The ARFC offers an unprecedented route toward hydrogen economy as CO2 is simultaneously captured and pure H-2 produced at mild conditions.
More
Translated text
Key words
alcohol reformation, direct alcohol fuel cell, entropic heat, neutralization energy, CO2 sequestration
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined