Abstract
AbstractFuel‐cell‐based auxiliary power units benefit from the high power density and fuel flexibility of solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs), facilitating straightforward onboard fuel processing of diesel or jet fuel. The preferred method of producing the fuel gas is autothermal reforming, which to date has shown the best practical applicability. However, the resulting reformate is poor in methane, so that cell cooling is not supported by internal methane steam reforming. Accordingly, large flow rates of excess air are required to cool the stack. Hence, the power demand of the cathode air blower significantly limits the net electrical power output of the system and large cathode flow channels are required. The present work examines attempts to further increase the system efficiency in middle‐distillate‐fueled SOFC systems by decreasing the cathode air flow rates. The proposed concept is generally based on inducing endothermic methane steam reforming (MSR) inside the cells by augmenting the methane content in an upstream methanation step. Methanation, however, can only yield significant methane production rates if the reaction temperature is limited. Therefore, four process layouts are presented that include different cooling measures. Based on these setups, the general feasibility and the benefit of intermediate methanation are demonstrated.
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