Abstract

This study developed a thermodynamic model of a set of sulfuric acid decomposers for thermochemical hydrogen production. It was integrated with a 1 MW tubular-type solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) stack. With the model, we evaluated the feasibility of the combined production of electric power, heat, and sulfur dioxide for thermochemical H2 production. The integrated reactor model consists of three parts: i) SOFC submodel, ii) sulfuric acid decomposition (SAD) submodel, and iii) sulfur trioxide decomposition (STD) submodel with the catalysts Pt/γAl2O3 and WX-1. The efficiency of the integrated system was evaluated at a low-pressure range by polarization and efficiency curves for the SOFC, as well as pinch analysis for the SAD. The highest SOFC efficiency and SO2 production were achieved at 1.25 bar, whereas the lowest fuel consumption and heat demand for SO2 production were achieved at 3.0 bar. Furthermore, WX-1 performed better in the high-temperature range, whereas Pt/γAl2O3 performed better than WX-1 under low-temperature conditions. The Pt-supported catalyst could achieve SO3 conversion of 66% and SO2 yield of 57% at a gas temperature of 1025 K using the proposed integrated reactor design.

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