Abstract

Hydrogen permeation through a palladium membrane has been measured in the presence of several gases, such as CO, N 2 , CO 2 , and Ar, both in the feed side and in the shell side of the (membrane) module. It has been found that CO molecules, remarkably inhibit hydrogen permeation. In particular, in the presence of carbon monoxide the permeation decreases with two different slopes: (I) for low CO concentrations, the hydrogen permeation decreases quickly (surface effects), whereas (II) for higher ones it decreases smoothly (dilute effect). Permeation of hydrogen, in the presence of the other gases, i.e. N 2 , CO 2 and Ar, always decreases with the same slope (dilute effect). In order to describe the CO inhibition, a theoretical investigation has been proposed. In particular, the framework of the Density Functional Theory has been used. CO and N 2 Density Functional full optimisations on palladium clusters show that CO and N 2 molecules present two minima on the cluster surfaces with bond lengths of 2.0 and 3.8 Å, respectively. The CO minima are much stable than N 2 minima, resulting in a surface effect on the hydrogen permeation through the membrane.

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