Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10385323 | Chemical Engineering Research and Design | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Micro-structured reactors were applied for processing of fuels such as propane to produce purified hydrogen for fuel cells. Mostly home-made wash-coated noble metal catalysts were introduced into micro-channels and applied for propane steam reforming (Rh/Pt/CeO2 on g-Al2O3), partial oxidation of propane (commercial Rh-catalyst), total oxidation of propane, water-gas shift (Pt/CeO2 on γ-Al2O3) and the selective oxidation of carbon monoxide (Rh/Pt on γ-Al2O3). Micro-structured reactor concepts for both catalyst testing and integrated heat-exchanger/reactors are presented. The latter allow for combining exothermal and endothermal reactions or combustion and evaporation in a single device. The size of the devices under investigation ranges from 100 W to 5 kW electrical output of the fuel cell, which is supplied with the hydrogen produced. Finally, a exemplary concept example of a complete fuel processor based micro-technology is discussed.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Filtration and Separation
Authors
G. Kolb, V. Cominos, C. Hofmann, H. Pennemann, J. Schürer, D. Tiemann, M. Wichert, R. Zapf, V. Hessel, H. Löwe,