Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
633131 Journal of Membrane Science 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•PdCuAg alloys do not form bulk sulfide after exposure to 100 ppm H2S at 673 K.•A H2 flux recovery of ~80% was observed upon reintroduction of pure H2 at 673 K.•Complete flux recovery after H2S exposure required hydrogen treatment at 773 K.

PdCuAu ternary alloy membranes with different component compositions were synthesized by sequential electroless deposition of components onto porous stainless steel substrates. The ternary with the highest Au content, Pd69Cu14Au17, exhibited the highest hydrogen permeation flux, comparable to that of a Pd91Au9 membrane. Upon exposure to 100 ppm H2S/H2 at 673 K for 24 h, all PdCuAu membranes experienced flux reductions of ~55%, followed by recovery to ~80% of the initial hydrogen flux upon reintroduction of pure hydrogen at 400 °C. Complete flux recovery after H2S exposure required hydrogen treatment at 500 °C. X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis of the H2S-exposed PdCuAu membranes revealed fcc alloy structure with no evidence of bulk sulfide formation. In agreement with the XRD results, sulfur was not detected in the bulk of H2S-exposed samples by energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS). However, analysis of H2S-exposed PdCuAu alloys by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) depth profiling revealed low, but measureable, amounts of sulfur in the near-surface region, about 10 nm in depth. The depth profiles of samples after hydrogen recovery treatment showed significantly reduced sulfur content. These results indicate that H2S exposure causes flux loss in PdCuAu alloys through a surface-poisoning mechanism, and that the surface sulfide can be removed—and flux recovered—by high temperature treatment in hydrogen.

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