Abstract

Palladium-based membrane-assisted fluidized bed reactors have been proposed for the production of ultra-pure hydrogen at small scales. Due to the improved heat and mass transfer characteristics inside such reactors, it is commonly believed that they can outperform packed bed membrane reactor configurations. It has been widely shown that the performance of packed bed membrane reactors can suffer from serious mass transfer limitations from the bulk of the catalyst bed to the surface of the membranes (concentration polarization) when using modern highly permeable membranes. The extent of concentration polarization in fluidized bed membrane reactors has not yet been researched in detail. In this work, we have quantified the concentration polarization effect inside fluidized bed membrane reactors with immersed vertical membranes with high hydrogen fluxes. A Two-Fluid Model (TFM) was used to quantify the extent of concentration polarization and to visualize the concentration profiles near the membrane. The concentration profiles were simplified to a mass transfer boundary layer (typically 1cm in thickness), which was implemented in a 1D fluidized bed membrane reactor model to account for the concentration polarization effects. Predictions by the TFM and the extended 1D model showed very good agreement with experimental hydrogen flux data. The experiments and models show that concentration polarization can reduce the hydrogen flux by a factor of 3 even at low H2 concentrations in the feed (10%), which confirms that concentration polarization can also significantly affect the performance of fluidized bed membrane reactors when integrating highly permeable membranes, but to a somewhat lesser extent than packed bed membrane reactors. The extraction of hydrogen also affects the gas velocity and solids hold-up profiles in the fluidized bed.

Highlights

  • Hydrogen is mainly produced on large scale via steam reforming of methane (SMR) [1]

  • First the experimental results will be compared with the results obtained with the Two-Fluid Model (TFM) to obtain a proper estimation of the radial dispersion coefficient for the fluidized suspension

  • The description could be extended using boundary layer theory to account for this, but the results shown later will show that the assumption of a constant film layer thickness is sufficient for this system

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Hydrogen is mainly produced on large scale via steam reforming of methane (SMR) [1]. The equilibrium displacement (Le Chatelier’s principle) allows to minimize the reactor volume up to 80% for WGS [3] and maximize the efficiencies, as total conversion can be achieved already at lower temperatures [4] In literature, both packed bed and fluidized-bed membrane reactor configurations have been proposed for SMR and WGS reactions. The Two-Fluid Model, an Euler-Euler model using the Kinetic Theory of Granular Flow to describe the solids phase rheology, is used to estimate the mass transfer boundary layer thickness required by the 1D model The predictions by both models are compared with results obtained from experiments showing good agreement, confirming that concentration polarization can prevail in fluidized bed membrane reactors

Modeling
Two-fluid model
Experimental
Results and discussion
Film layer thickness
Densified zones
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call