| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9759280 | International Journal of Hydrogen Energy | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
A bed of ZrV1.9Fe0.1 particles packed between cylindrical-annular tubes was studied as a tool to absorb and evolve hydrogen reversibly at higher temperature, where hydrogen is produced by steam-reforming reaction of methane or thermo-chemical decomposition of water using nuclear heat. The alloy had a sufficient absorption capacity even at 973Â K and showed temperature rise in the bed during hydrogen absorption without any external heating. The experimental absorption and evolution rates ranged maximally to 170 and 80cm3 (NTP)/s, respectively. The hydrogen absorption rate was constant until the hydrogen absorption amount approached its saturated value. The ZrV1.9Fe0.1 particle bed evolved hydrogen with a constant rate in proportion to the heating rate. The hydrogen evolution rate was regulated easily by raising or lowering the heating rate. Thus, the alloy bed was found to provide a promising tool to recover and evolve hydrogen at steam-reforming temperature.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Electrochemistry
Authors
Satoshi Fukada, Naoki Shimoozaki, Shinsuke Morimitsu, Masabumi Nishikawa,
