Abstract

The production of hydrogen for fuel cells by steam reforming of heptane is investigated in a Circulating Fluidized Bed Membrane Reformer-Regenerator ( CFBMRR) system (A.I.Ch.E. Journal 49(5) (2003) 1250). Palladium based hydrogen permselective membranes are used for hydrogen removal and dense perovskite oxygen permselective membranes are used for oxygen introduction. A series of pseudo-steady-state simulations show that when the catalyst is not regenerated, the circulating nickel reforming catalyst deactivates quickly and the “half catalyst activity life” for efficient production of hydrogen is quite short, especially at high temperatures. Efficient continuous catalyst regeneration can keep the catalyst activity high ( ∼ 1.0 ) . With continuous catalyst regeneration, autothermal operation for the entire adiabatic reformer–regenerator system is achievable when the exothermic heat generated from the catalyst regenerator is sufficient to compensate for the endothermic heat consumed in the riser reformer. This type of autothermal operation becomes less likely at high steam to carbon feed ratios. This is due to the fact that carbon deposition rate decreases leading to the decrease of autothermal circulating feed temperature and energy-based hydrogen yield (adiabatic hydrogen yield in autothermal reformer–regenerator system). Multiplicity of the steady states for the reformer is possible for this configuration. With the steam to carbon feed ratio as the bifurcation parameter, multiplicity occurs between the two bifurcation points 1.444 and 2.251 mol/mol. In this multiplicity region, the energy-based hydrogen yield at the upper steady state with high regenerator output temperature is surprisingly the lowest one. While it is the highest one at the lower steady state with low regenerator output temperature. The maximum energy-based hydrogen yield is about 15.58 moles of hydrogen per mole of heptane fed at the lower steady-state when steam to carbon feed ratio is very close to the bifurcation value of 1.444 mol/mol. After removing the sweep gas steam by downstream cooling and de-humidification, the product hydrogen from steam reforming of hydrocarbons can be used for fuel cells with high purity ( ∼ 100 % ) .

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