Abstract

Over the next decade, the production and use of hydrogen in various sectors of the global economy is anticipated to grow significantly. It is an already important feedstock in the production of ammonia and desulfurization of fuels in addition to being used in metals refining and as a coolant in thermal electric power plants. More recently, hydrogen is being considered for long-term seasonal energy storage for energy derived from renewables like solar and wind. To alleviate the severe costs of building out completely new infrastructure, the U.S. natural gas pipeline represents an enticing proposition for hydrogen storage and a potential distribution network from centralized production facilities. Embrittlement concerns of the pipeline with hydrogen limit the hydrogen partial pressure/concentration of hydrogen to be stored. Because many end use applications often require high purity hydrogen, it is necessary to separate/de-blend hydrogen from natural gas and compress it at the point-of-use. This talk presents high-temperature polymer electrolyte membrane (HT-PEM) electrochemical hydrogen pumps for separating hydrogen from gas mixtures. Hydrogen purification to +99% from syngas (25mol% hydrogen and 40mol% carbon monoxide (CO)) at 1 A cm-2 and cell voltage of 0.4 V with an electrochemical hydrogen pump was demonstrated. About 90% of hydrogen used in the United States today derives from steam-reformed natural gas that contains large concentrations of CO – which is a potent platinum electrocatalyst poison at temperatures below 100 °C. The hydrogen purification from syngas was possible with an electrochemical hydrogen pump operated at 220 °C and by using: i.) an ion pair HT-PEM that exploits electrostatic interactions to prevent phosphoric acid leaching at elevated temperatures from the membrane matrix and in the presence of water and ii.) a phosphonic acid ionomer electrode binder. The membrane electrode assembly (MEA) with the said materials and platinum on carbon (Pt/C) electrocatalyst was also effective for purifying hydrogen from other types of reformed hydrocarbons with different CO and hydrogen concentrations. Unexpectedly, operating the HT-PEM hydrogen pump at 220 °C minimized CO impact on cell polarization. At this temperature, cell polarization was governed by the hydrogen concentration in the gas feed. These observations motivate future work to develop new electrodes and electrode binders that can extract, purify, and compress hydrogen with feed streams that have low hydrogen content and contain other constituents in natural gas (methane, ethane, t-butyl mercaptan, etc).

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