Hydrogen Handling Materials - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Hydrogen Handling Materials

Description:

To develop a family of innovative low-cost materials that can ... Water gas shift / Formic acid. Hydrogenation at mild temperature ( 200 deg C) Hydrogen Sensor ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:55
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: suzanne113
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Hydrogen Handling Materials


1
Hydrogen Handling Materials
  • Dr Ian Whyte
  • Project Manager
  • Ian.Whyte_at_itienergy.com

2
Objective and Strategy
  • To develop a family of innovative low-cost
    materials that can store and release hydrogen
    under mild thermodynamic conditions (room to
    moderate temperature and pressure)
  • Collaborate with international RD partners for
    further development of the technology
  • Engage with industrial partners for identifying
    and developing one or two early stage
    application(s)

ITI-Energy is committed to funding up to 1.7
million ( 2.5 million) over June 2005 March
2007
3
Bon Accord Programme Overview
Sponsors
  • ITI Energy
  • Alterg SA (DS Huguenin, Primaveris)
  • O. Bordelanne

Scientific Advisers
Management Team
  • Pr Pethrick
  • Pr Walsh
  • Dr Ian Whyte
  • Dr Len Berlouis
  • Dr Mark D. Spicer
  • Dr Olivier Bordelanne

Strathclyde University (RD Centre)
RD Contractors
(ENSM-SE, CNAM, Ni-Tech)
Potential Collaboration Partners
Major RD Organizations
Device Developers
Product Manufacturing
  • Application tests
  • Fundamentals
  • H2 storage container
  • Electrodes
  • Fine chemicals/chemistry
  • Catalysts

4
Management Research Team
  • Dr Ian Whyte (Business Development Mgr. and
    Programme Mgr.)
  • - PhD in Electrochemical Engineering, University
    of Southampton (1991).
  • - 15 years experience in the electrochemical,
    materials and energy technology (Regenesys)
  • Dr Olivier Bordelanne (Applications Development
    Mgr.)
  • - PhD in Physical Chemistry of Materials,
    University of Bordeaux (France).
  • - 6 years RD experience in the field of metal
    oxides
  • Dr Len Berlouis (Laboratory Manager)
  • - PhD in Physical Chemistry, University of
    Southampton.
  • 24 years RD experience in the fields of
    electrochemistry, materials characterisation and
    hydrogen storage
  • Dr Mark D Spicer (Fundamentals Manager)
  • - PhD in Coordination Chemistry, University of
    Southampton
  • 20 years experience in spectroscopy and
    structural techniques applied to complex chemical
    systems
  • Dr Clotilde Jubin (Researcher Univ.
    Strathclyde)
  • - PhD in inorganic chemistry and Catalysis,
    University Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris
  • 5 years RD experience in the field of synthesis
    and charaterisation of metal oxides
  • Dr Brian Mc Millan (Researcher Univ.
    Strathclyde)
  • - in Electrochemistry, University of Strathclyde
  • 4 years RD experience in the field of
    electrochemistry and optics
  • Dr Pik Leung Tang and Jim Morrow (Researchers
    Univ. Strathclyde)

5
Bon Accord Programme Execution
Programme Management Business Development
RD Centre Strathclyde Univ.
Applications development Process Scale-up
Technology Dev. strategy
EXAF Daresbury
Electrochem.
Storage Spec.
Process scale-up
Product synthesis
New RD partnerships
Catalysis
Material Structure
Storage test device CNAM
Product charact.
Sensors
Storage Mechanism
H2 isotopes
Product performance Strathclyde Univ, ENSME
New family of products
6
H2 / Material Interactions
M
H
M
M
M
M
H2
M
H
H
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
H
M
M
H
H
M
M
M
Physisorption i.e. carbon Solid H2 ? SH2
Chemical bonds creation i.e. alloys Solid H2 ?
SH2
Hydrogenated species insertion Solid H2 ? SH2
Chemical bonding is not easily reversible and
materials costs are high
Gas physisorption requires high pressures or very
low temperatures
? Reversible storage near STP ? Potential high
energetic densities ? Low cost materials
7
Bon Accord materials family
  • Core-Shell structure material with
  • Core Metal oxide/hydroxide/oxyhydroxide with
    fluorite structure. Metal selected from among Ce,
    Pr, Th.
  • Shell Catalyst comprising metal
    oxide/hydroxide/oxyhydroxide of Ni, Cu, Co...
  • Scope for doping
  • Effect of doping explored through numerous
    samples
  • Large field requiring further investigation

8
Key characteristics of BA materials
  • Established properties
  • Intimate coupling bulk/catalyst.
  • Materials not calcined.
  • Specific surface area 150 m2/g.
  • Not hydride-type material.
  • Under investigation
  • Exact nature of hydrogen species within the
    material.
  • Impact of surface area on the storage capacity

9
Storage Performances
Desorption rate
  • Values obtained from calibration of the TPD/MS
    emission peaks using Pd foil (Strathclyde).
  • Results confirmed by a number of other
    institutions (Thermo Electron in Milan, ENSM-SE)

10
Performance of reference materials
  • Reversible storage capacity evaluation
  • LT peak reversible (up to 0.5 wt, lt 120C, 25
    cycles)
  • Reversibility of HT peak (up to 2.5 wt, 200
    250 C) under investigation
  • Activation conditions optimization
  • map completed for 3 reference compositions
  • Poisoning
  • work in progress in ENSM-SE
  • test for H2O, CO, CO2, H2S, CH4, NH3
  • Product data sheet
  • H2 storage - partly completed
  • Battery electrode - spec defined
  • Catalysis - under construction

11
Fundamentals
  • Material Structure Fine Characterisation
  • XAFS at Daresbury complete
  • Various methods being investigated
  • Raman spec., in situ XRD, XPS, HREM
  • Neutron diffraction planned as EPSRC grant
  • Stored species, localisation storage mechanism
  • Several mechanism concepts put forward
  • Based on literature and macro-scale experiments
  • Will be investigated through XAFS
  • Modelling work postponed to next phase
  • New generation of products
  • Results with dopants complex (activation
    conditions)
  • Work shelved until core products better
    understood

12
Process scale-up
  • Identify and evaluate options
  • Several 100g batches produced in Strathclyde on
    spec
  • Effect of process conditions mapped resulting in
    simplified recipe and better understanding of
    product
  • Partnership for process scale-up
  • Several options under discussion
  • Production cost evaluation
  • Evaluation completed, based on above recipe -
    indicates lt 15 /kg

13
Application areas
  • Hydrogen storage
  • Small size containers e.g. buffer storage for FC
    or electrolysers
  • Hydrogen dispensing stations
  • Electrochemistry
  • H2 reservoir materials for battery electrodes
  • Anode materials for fuel cells
  • Catalysis
  • Water gas shift / Formic acid
  • Hydrogenation at mild temperature (lt200 deg C)
  • Hydrogen Sensor
  • Trapping of H2 or its isotopes

14
Applications development
  • Proof of concept H2 storage device
  • CNAM storage bottle ready
  • Test in progress
  • Electrochemical evaluation of the materials
  • Work in progress in Strathclyde and ENSM-SE
  • Desk study on required spec by Catella Generics
  • Catalysis
  • Proposal by ENSM SE approved
  • Sensors
  • Proposal by ENSM SE finalised

15
Partnerships
  • Major Companies
  • M-Co1 successful visit to Strathclyde in
    September
  • M-Co2 successful visit to Strathclyde in October
  • M-Co3 contact established on catalysis / FC
    electrodes
  • M-Co4 re-open discussion after mechanism
    clarified
  • Specific application Co.
  • Visit to Pure centre (buffer storage)
  • S-Co1 Storage re-open discussion after CNAM
    tests
  • S-Co2 Catalysis re-open discussion after
    ENSM-SE tests
  • R D organisations
  • Catella Generics contract completed
  • TLK - Karlsruhe additional test with D2 in
    progress
  • Fraunhofer Freiburg / ZSW Ulm Scale-up with ZSW

16
Potential collaboration areasfor new partners
  • Additional characterisation
  • structural
  • application specific
  • Development of products for specific applications
  • as per previous slides
  • application tests
  • Development of manufacturing process
  • Increased surface area and (possibly) smaller
    particle size
  • Large scale production

17
Development Concept
18
Questions?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com