| Hydrogen Production Via Pd-Ag Permeators: Membrane Reactor Design and Process Study | ||
| Silvano Tosti1, Angelo Basile2, Livio Bettinali1, Fabio Borgognoni3 and Claudio Rizzello3, (1)C.R. ENEA Frascati, ENEA, Unità Tecnico Scientifica Fusione, Via E. Fermi 45, Frascati (Roma), Italy, (2)Institute on Membrane Technology, ITM-CNR, c/o University of Calabria, Via P. Bucci, Cubo 17/C, Rende (CS), Italy, (3)Tesi Sas, Via Bolzano 28, Rome, Italy Thin wall Pd-Ag permeator tubes have been produced by a diffusion welding procedure: these low-cost membranes are proposed for separating and producing high-pure hydrogen in membrane reactors. The reliability of these dense metallic permeators is strongly related to the design configuration of the membrane modules. In fact, as a consequence of hydrogen and thermal cycling. the dense metallic tubes vary their length: in case of constrains between the membrane and the module, cyclic axial stresses on the tube can rise leading to the rupture of the permeator. In our application, a finger type assembly of the membrane tubes has been designed: it permits the free elongation and contraction of the palladium alloy tube avoiding any mechanical cycling stress. A process in which a membrane reactor produces ultrapure hydrogen needed to a polymeric fuel cell of power 500 W has been designed: the process foresees the use of both traditional and membrane reactors. The membrane reactor consists of a bundle of Pd-Ag thin wall tubes operating in parallel where the water gas shift reaction takes place. The membrane reactor consisting of Pd-Ag tubes operating at 350°C and 200 kPa while the hydrogen stream of about 6 liter/min is recovered in the shell side by means of nitrogen sweep gas at 100 kPa. Keywords: Pd-Ag Membranes, Hydrogen Production, Membrane Reactor Design. Extended Abstract Status: File Uploaded | ||