Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6588605 | Chemical Engineering Science | 2018 | 47 Pages |
Abstract
We examined the kinetic and transport processes involved in the production of H2 from water with Co2+ as the electroactive species being oxidized at a Ni electrode in 40â¯wt% KOH at 318â¯K. The relevant transport parameters such as electrochemical rate constants, transfer coefficients, diffusion coefficients, and adsorption coefficients were estimated from a combination of cyclic voltammetry experiments and numerical modeling. Fourteen parameters characterize the electrochemical reaction on a clean electrode, with the Butler-Volmer equation describing the electron transfer step to solution and to adsorption bound electroactive species. A Frumkin Isotherm describes the thermodynamics of the adsorption process. Experimentally realized anodic current densities at cell voltages below 1.23â¯V were circa 1â¯mAâ¯cmâ2, a hydrogen production level far too low for commercial viability of the solar thermal decoupled water electrolysis process. However, our 3-D finite element model of the electrochemical cell operating at 318â¯K, suggests that current densities approaching 20â¯mAâ¯cmâ2 can be reached in a cell with forced convection and a solvent that increases the solubility of CoO by a factor of 10 above that for KOH. Finally, the current density calculations from the perspective of industrial viability suggest producing porous metal anodes for which the actual surface area is 10-100â¯times larger than the electrode's planar area.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
S. Nudehi, C. Larson, W. Prusinski, D. Kotfer, J. Otto, E. Beyers, J. Schoer, R. Palumbo,