4.3 Article

Novel nickel-based catalyst for low temperature hydrogen production from methane steam reforming in membrane reformer

Journal

ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages 93-100

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/apj.363

Keywords

hydrogen production; membrane reformer; methane steam reforming; novel catalyst

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China (973 project) [2005cb221401]

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Hydrogen production from various hydrocarbon fuels, particularly biomass-derived fuels, has attracted worldwide attention due to its potential for application to fuel cells, a device which converts chemical energy into electricity efficiently and cleanly. However, current technology, such as natural gas steam reforming, could not meet the specific requirements of hydrogen for fuel cells. Therefore, novel processes are intensively investigated, aiming to develop economic and efficient ones for the specific purpose. An important direction is the integrated membrane reformer for one-step high-purity hydrogen production. However, for the commercial realization of this technology, there are still some difficulties to overcome. By comparison with previous investigations with a similar membrane, this work showed that catalyst also played an important role in determining membrane reformer performance. We proposed that when thickness of membrane was several micrometers, the permeance of membrane became less important than the kinetics of catalyst, due to the fact that under Such conditions, hydrogen permeation rate was faster than the kinetics of steam reforming reaction when commercial catalyst was applied, but further evidence is indispensable. In this initial work, we focused on developing efficient nickel catalyst for low temperature steam reforming. Nickel-based catalyst was developed by deposition-coprecipitation and used as pre-reduced, showing high performance for methane steam reforming at low temperatures and good durability, which may find practical application for the integrated membrane reforming process. (C) 2009 Curtin University of Technology and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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