Abstract

In this paper, a theoretical and experimental study on a novel cobalt-chlorine thermochemical cycle for hydrogen production is presented. The cobalt-chlorine cycle comprises a closed loop of four thermochemical reactions occurring at 700 °C that is a reaction temperature compatible with the present generation of high-temperature gas-cooled reactors. Firstly, a thermodynamic analysis was done for determining whether this cycle is attractive for hydrogen production in terms of both energy and exergy efficiencies. Following, proof-of-principle experiments were carried out at laboratory scale in a batch reactor at temperatures in the range from 550 °C to 950 °C and holding times between 1 h and 72 h. Experimental results complemented by the characterization of condensed compounds deposited on the reactor walls allowed confirm the reaction pathway of thermochemical reactions originally proposed, define the slowest step of the global process, and explain the beneficial effect of increasing the system pressure on the hydrogen yield. Even both performance assessment and proof-of-principle experimental results look like promising more research will be required in the future to confirm these preliminary findings. Finally, a modified version of the cobalt-chlorine cycle is proposed for enhancing the global kinetics, based on the experimental evidence found in the proof-of-principle tests.

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