Abstract

Vanadium-based membranes have great potential for hydrogen purification due to their perfect selectivity, high permeability, and relatively low cost. With appropriate surface cleaning, V efficiently permeates hydrogen at elevated temperature, but performance declines due to its affinity to absorb impurities. The application of palladium thin films maintains a clean surface that catalyzes hydrogen dissociation and recombination. Hydrogen permeation in Pd-V-Pd membranes initially reach theoretical permeability, but declines due to Pd-V interdiffusion. The objective of this work was to quantify the intermetallic diffusion process as a function of temperature and ambient. Pd-V composites were subjected to various annealing treatments and characterized using Auger electron spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, as well as correlated to measurements of membrane permeability. In an inert environment Pd-V interdiffusion was observable as low as 300 °C, and the diffusion coefficient had an activation energy of 44 kJ/mol. Furthermore, the presence of hydrogen at partial pressures > 10 kPa accelerated interdiffusion six-fold at T = 400 °C. Membrane performance degraded with an activation energy 75 kJ/mol, suggesting that intermetallic diffusion leads to both a loss of catalytic activity and as well as degradation of bulk permeability. These findings provide a baseline for evaluating hydrogen permeable interdiffusion barriers to overcome these challenges.

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