4.5 Article

Investigation of thermal and carbothermal reduction of volatile oxides (ZnO, SnO2, GeO2, and MgO) via solar-driven vacuum thermogravimetry for thermochemical production of solar fuels

Journal

THERMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 605, Issue -, Pages 86-94

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.tca.2015.02.015

Keywords

Solar fuel; Solar reactor; Thermogravimeter; Reduced pressure; Vacuum reduction; Redox materials thermochemical cycles

Funding

  1. EADS foundation [CNRS CT 084210]

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This study addresses the solar thermogravimetry analysis of high-temperature reduction reactions involvingvolatile metal oxides for application in solar thermochemical fuel production via two-step H2O and CO2 splitting. The redox cycles. encompass the thermal or carbo-thermal reduction of a metal oxide using concentrated solar energy followed by its oxidation with CO2 and/or H2O to produce solar-derived fuels (CO and/or H-2). A new solar-driven vacuum thermogravimeter has been developed for the investigation of the high-temperature thermochemical reactions. The system is designed for reduced pressure operation down to a few mbar with flowing purge gas for studying low-pressure conditions, while the weight change of the solid reactants is continuously monitored during high-temperature solar heating under non-linear heating profile. The method was applied to investigate the kinetic rates of the thermochemical solid/gas reactions involving ZnO, SnO2, GeO2, and MgO volatile oxides in a controlled atmosphere. The reaction rates were determined as a function of the temperature for different pressures in the system. Metal oxides reduction under low pressure was shown to be of special interest because the reaction rate is greatly enhanced and the required temperature to achieve a given reduction rate is significantly lowered. In contrast to inert gas dilution, a total pressure decrease also reduces the need for a diluent gas, thus simplifying the process and avoiding energy penalties associated with inert gas recycling. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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