Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1282838 International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2010 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

A hydrogen production method is proposed, which utilizes solar energy powered thermodynamic cycle using supercritical carbon dioxide (CO2) as working fluid for the combined production of hydrogen and thermal energy. The proposed system consists of evacuated solar collectors, power generating turbine, water electrolysis, heat recovery system, and feed pump. In the present study, an experimental prototype has been designed and constructed. The performance of the cycle is tested experimentally under different weather conditions. CO2 is efficiently converted into supercritical state in the collector, the CO2 temperature reaches about 190 °C in summer days, and even in winter days it can reach about 80 °C. Such a high-temperature realizes the combined production of electricity and thermal energy. Different from the electrochemical hydrogen production via solar battery-based water splitting on hand, which requires the use of solar batteries with high energy requirements, the generated electricity in the supercritical cycle can be directly used to produce hydrogen gas from water. The amount of hydrogen gas produced by using the electricity generated in the supercritical cycle is about 1035 g per day using an evacuated solar collector of 100.0 m2 for per family house in summer conditions, and it is about 568.0 g even in winter days. Additionally, the estimated heat recovery efficiency is about 0.62. Such a high efficiency is sufficient to illustrate the cycle performance.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
Authors
, , ,