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Home : Volume 31 : Fall 2004 :
Wisconsin engineers clear bottleneck in production of hydrogen

Discovery could lead to new strategies for operating fuel cells

Dumesic lab

From left to right: Professor Jim Dumesic, graduate students Steven Evans, Tobias Voitl, Gabriel Rodriguez-Rivera, and postdoctoral researcher Won Bae Kim have discovered a method to capture energy from carbon monoxide. (25K JPG)

Carbon monoxide (CO) has long been a major technical barrier to the efficient operation of fuel cells. But now, COE chemical and biological engineers have not only cleared that barrier, they also have discovered a method to capture carbon monoxide's energy.

Hydrocarbons such as gasoline, natural gas or ethanol must be reformed into a hydrogen-rich gas to be useful in a power-generating fuel cell. A large, costly and critical step to this process requires generating steam and reacting it with CO in a process called water-gas shift (WGS) to produce hydrogen and carbon dioxide (CO2). Additional steps reduce the CO levels further before the hydrogen enters a fuel cell.

Reporting in the August 27 issue of Science, Chemical and Biological Engineering Steenbock Professor James Dumesic, postdoctoral researcher Won Bae Kim, and graduate students Tobias Voitl and Gabriel Rodriguez-Rivera eliminated the water-gas shift reaction from the process, removing the need to transport and vaporize liquid water in the production of energy for portable applications. The team uses an environmentally benign polyoxometalate (POM) compound to oxidize CO in liquid water at room temperature. The compound not only removes CO from gas streams for fuel cells, but also converts the energy content of CO into a liquid that subsequently can be used to power a fuel cell.

"CO has essentially as much energy as hydrogen," Dumesic says. "It has a lot of energy in it. If you take a hydrocarbon and partially oxidize it at high temperature, it primarily makes CO and hydrogen. Conventional systems follow that with a series of these 'water-gas shift' steps. Our discovery has the potential of eliminating those steps. Instead, you can send the CO through our process which works efficiently at room temperature, and takes the CO out of the gas to make energy."

The research team says the process is especially promising for producing electrical energy from renewable biomass-derived oxygenated hydrocarbons, such as ethylene glycol derived from corn, because these fuels generate H2 and CO in nearly equal amounts during catalytic decomposition. The hydrogen could be used directly in a proton-exchange-membrane fuel cell operating at 50-percent efficiency and the remaining CO could be converted to electricity via the researchers' new process. The overall efficiency of such a system is equal to 40-percent and does not require water as would be needed in traditional ethylene glycol reforming. The overall efficiency is equivalent to 60 percent of the energy content of octane.

Dumesic's team believes the advance will make possible a new generation of inexpensive fuel cells operating with solutions of reduced POM compounds. While higher current densities can be achieved in fuel cells using electrodes containing precious metals, the researchers found that good current densities can be generated using a simple carbon anode.

Diagram of CO oxidation reactor with gold catalyst and fuel cell powered with reduced polyoxometalate as a shuttle for energy storage from CO.

The diagram shows a carbon monoxide oxidation reactor, powered with reduced polyoxometalate. (68K JPG)



Content by perspective@engr.wisc.edu

Date last modified: Friday, 10-Jun-2005 15:29:43 CDT
Date created: 29-Nov-2004

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