4.7 Article

Enhancement of hydrogen clean energy production from greenhouse gas by in-situ hydrogen separation with a cobalt-silica membrane

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 388, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.135874

Keywords

Hydrogen -rich gas; Silica membrane; Gas separation; Hydrothermal stability; Separation enhanced methane steam reforming

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This study aimed to improve the hydrothermal stability of silica membrane by doping cobalt in silica membrane precursors. A cobalt-doped silica membrane with a cobalt/silicon ratio of 1/4 was fabricated. The membrane exhibited good helium permeance and selectivity at 500℃. It was then used for methane steam reforming, which resulted in increased methane conversion and hydrogen production.
Methane steam reforming is a representative reaction to convert carbon-rich fuel to carbon-free fuel. However, the thermodynamic equilibrium limits the conversion from methane to hydrogen. Separating hydrogen in-situ from hydrocarbon reforming reactions by inorganic membranes is an effective way to overcome the thermo-dynamic equilibrium, which improves the conversion of the reforming reactions and the efficiency of hydrogen production. Silica-based membrane, due to its size sieving effect, could separate hydrogen molecules from other larger gases at high temperatures, but the poor hydrothermal stability of silica in steam conditions remains a challenge for the application in hydrogen production. In this study, to improve the hydrothermal stability cobalt was doped in silica membrane precursors with varying ratios. After a series of characterizations by dynamic light scattering, Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, nitrogen adsorption and Scanning Elec-tron Microscope, a cobalt-silica membrane with a cobalt/silicon ratio of 1/4 was fabricated by dip-coating technique. At 500 degrees C the membrane delivered helium permeance of 9.37 x 10-8 mol m- 2 s-1 Pa -1, helium/ nitrogen perm-selectivity of 258.48, and helium/carbon dioxide perm-selectivity of 242.19. The membrane was then employed in methane steam reforming for in-situ hydrogen separation to enhance methane conversion and hydrogen production. Raising the reaction temperature favors the performance of the membrane reactor, but temperature over 550 degrees C was still challenging due to hydrothermal stability issue. Increasing reaction pressure from 0 to 0.3 MPa favored methane conversion, but pressure over 0.4 MPa led to concentration polarization. Steam to carbon (S/C) ratio of 3 was suitable to avoid nickel/alumina catalyst coking and methane dilution. Reducing the gas hourly space velocity (GHSV) ensured sufficient residence time for methane and favored methane conversion. At T = 500 degrees C, Delta p = 0.3 MPa, S/C = 3 and GHSV = 30 ml g-1 h-1, the membrane elevated the methane conversion from 45.36% (without membrane) to 83.71%. With a cobalt-silica membrane 4.32 ml min- 1 of hydrogen was continuously produced with a purity of 82.12 vol% compared to 2.34 ml min- 1 of hydrogen with a purity of 65.0 vol% in the case without a membrane. As expected, the micro-morphology of the cobalt-doped membrane after the 20-day steam reforming test showed little visible change in scanning electron microscope. The reduction of pore volume was only 15% as compared to 25% for pure silica material. This membrane demonstrated promising potential in the efficient production of hydrogen.

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