1. Technical Field
The inventions disclosed herein generally relate to a water electrolysis device for the production of high purity hydrogen and oxygen, and catalysts for this device which promote increased electrical and cost efficiency.
2. Related Art
Hydrogen is a renewable fuel that produces zero emissions when used in a fuel cell. In 2005, the Department of Energy (DoE) developed a new hydrogen cost goal and methodology, namely to achieve $2.00-3.00/gasoline gallon equivalent (gge, delivered, untaxed, by 2015), independent of the pathway used to produce and deliver hydrogen. The principal method to produce hydrogen is by stream reformation. Nearly 95% of the hydrogen currently being produced is made by steam reformation, where natural gas is reacted on metallic catalyst at high temperature and pressure. While this process has the lowest cost, four pounds of the greenhouse gasses carbon monoxide (CO) and carbon dioxide (CO.sub.2) are produced for every one pound of hydrogen. Without further costly purification to remove CO and CO.sub.2, the hydrogen fuel cell cannot operate efficiently.
Alternatively, 5% of hydrogen production is from water electrolysis. This reaction is the direct splitting of water molecules to produce hydrogen and oxygen. Note that greenhouse gasses are not produced in these reactions. In this process, electrodes composed of catalyst particles are submersed in water and energy is applied to them. Using this energy, the electrodes split water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen. Hydrogen is produced at the cathode electrode which accepts electrons and oxygen is produced at the anode electrode which liberates electrons. The amount of hydrogen and oxygen produced by an electrode is dictated by the current supplied to the electrodes. The efficiency depends upon the voltage between the two electrodes, and is proportional to the reciprocal of that voltage. That is to say; efficiency increases as the voltage decreases. A more catalytic system will have a lower voltage for any one current, and therefore be more efficient in producing hydrogen and oxygen. If the catalyst is highly efficient, there will be minimal energy input to achieve a maximum hydrogen output. Unfortunately, this process is currently too expensive to compete with steam reformation due low efficiency and the use of expensive catalysts in the electrodes.
Devices that are configured to electrochemically convert reactants into products when energy is applied are generally known as electrolyzers. For an electrolyzer to operate with high efficiency, the amount of product produced during reaction should be maximized relative to the amount of energy input. In many conventional devices, low catalyst utilization in the electrodes, cell resistance, inefficient movement of electrolyte, and inefficient collection of reaction products from the electrolyte stream contribute to significant efficiency loss. In many cases, low efficiency is compensated for by operating the cell at a low rate (current). This strategy does increase efficiency, however, it also lowers the amount of products that can be produced at a given time. The electrolyzer described in the preferred embodiments can operate both at high rates and efficiencies.
Fluidized bed reactors (FBRs) have been designed to carry out chemical reactions that take place between materials of the same or different phases (solids, liquids and/or gasses). In an FBR that contains catalyst particles, a gas or liquid is passed upwardly through the FBR with enough flow rate to cause suspension of the catalyst particles. While FBRs have been used in the chemical industry because of their positive heat and mass transfer characteristics, use of FBRs remain unexplored in conjunction with electrochemical cells.
In one aspect of the invention, a high-surface area electrode is conceived. In one embodiment, the electrode comprises a porous or reticulate metal plate combined with catalytic metal particles, preferably at the nanoscale. The plate preferably includes some void volume to allow infusion of the nanosized metal particles. When immersed within an electrolyte, the metal particles can float freely and can substantially infuse into the porous/reticulate metal plate to create an electrode with extremely high surface area. This electrode can be applied to a variety of devices, including a hydrogen generation electrode in a water electrolyzer system. Essentially, in such an embodiment, the electrode functions as a fluidized bed. At least one advantage is that the electrode can be operated at very high current (rate), which in turn means that large amounts of hydrogen can be produced. Typical electrodes have a far lower surface area and thus cannot operate at rates significant enough to produce large quantities of hydrogen. Other advantages may include, depending upon the configuration, circumstances, and environment, the ability to scale the electrode to a wide variety of sizes, a high rate of hydrogen production, and the ability to minimize agglomeration by using nanosized particles.
In another aspect of the invention, a new electrochemical device is contemplated, preferably a water electrolysis device. Unlike traditional electrolyzers, such as that shown in
In yet another aspect of the invention, a fluidized bed electrolyzer may be provided that comprises a corrosion resistant container that houses a cylindrical separator. In one embodiment, porous anode and cathode electrodes may be disposed on the outer and/or inner circumference of the separator. The inner and outer chambers may be filled with electrolyte that preferably contains a plurality of reactive metal nanoparticles. Preferably, the generated anode and cathode gasses flow through the container in a manner that suspends the nanoparticles within the fluid, thus creating a fluidized bed. At least some advantages of this configuration include, (i) elimination of pumps via direct elimination of gasses from the upper vents and the self propagating nature of the fluidized bed, (ii) ease of keeping hydrogen and oxygen gasses separated, (iii) ease of controlling temperature and pressure, (iv) simple design, and (v) less expensive per unit of hydrogen produced, to name a few. Preferably, a number of vertical orientation electrolyzers are interconnected to function as an electrolyzer stack.
The features mentioned above in the summary of the invention, along with other features of the inventions disclosed herein, are described below with reference to the drawings of the preferred embodiments. The illustrated embodiments in the figures listed below are intended to illustrate, but not to limit the inventions.
Referring to
When electricity is applied to electrode 209 via electrical contact 212, oxygen is produced pursuant to the following general reaction: 2OH—+H2O+½O2+2e−. Oxygen is eliminated from the electrolyte stream before the electrolyte is returned to the cell. To ensure that all oxygen is being eliminated from the upper surfaces of the lower chamber, angled deflector 213 is placed proximal to port 211 to ensure that deoxygenated electrolyte is washing the separator 207. For some system measurements, a side chamber containing separator mat 214 is filled with electrolyte 201, and reference electrode 215 is placed to measure electrochemical potential versus the upper chamber. Additionally, working reference electrode 216 is placed in contact with electrode 204.
The system configuration illustrated in
The cathode electrode in the upper chamber has increased efficiency relative to a conventional electrode, in that reacting hydroxyl ions leave from the bottom of the electrode and resulting gas leaves from the top of the electrode. This minimizes ionic resistance in the device, as gas bubbles do not block catalyst sites on the electrode to outgoing hydroxyl ions or incoming water molecules.
In the lower chamber of the device, an angled deflector is placed proximal to the electrolyte inlet port. Because the electrolyte flows in a parallel fashion to the electrode surface and product gas rises, it is possible for gas bubbles to become lodged on the upper surface of the chamber proximal to the separator membrane, which can impede both water and ionic transport. By deflecting electrolyte to the upper surface of the chamber, the increased flow force of the electrolyte on that surface prevents gas bubbles from lodging and results in improved system efficiency.
In some of the preferred embodiments, the upper chamber features both an inlet and outlet port. One of the ports allows the removal of hydrogen gas from the system, and the other allows for direct injection of new electrolyte, compensatory water, or new catalyst. This feature allows for both simple cleaning and replenishment or replacement if catalyst and reactants.
Some of the preferred embodiments detail an increased available reaction surface through the use of porous electrodes. The electrodes can be prepared of networking metal particles, for example reticulate nickel or nickel foam. In other embodiments, the electrodes may be sintered metal plates, prepared such that the electrode is highly porous with a relatively large void volume. The electrodes are preferably prepared from metals, preferably selected from the group of metals from groups 3-16, and the lanthanide series. More preferably, the metals are transition metals, mixtures thereof, and alloys thereof and their respective oxides. Most preferably, the metal or metals are selected from the group consisting of nickel, iron, manganese, cobalt, tin, and silver, or combinations, alloys, and oxides thereof.
An aspect of at least some of the embodiments in this invention includes the realization that a reticulate or porous electrode's surface area can be increased significantly through the use of free moving reactive metal particles within the electrolyte. The electrolyte serves as both an ionic conductor and medium for the particles. Because of the reticulate or porous nature of the electrode, reactive metal particles can infuse into the electrode surface and become diffuse throughout the void volumes in the electrode. Preferably, the particles are less than one micron in effective diameter, and most preferably less than 100 nanometers in diameter. Most preferably, the reactive metal particles are less than 50 nm in diameter such that substantial portion can infuse into the electrode. Larger particles tend to agglomerate to the extent that the void volume within the electrode can no longer accommodate their size. This results in a significant loss in efficiency.
Referring to
The system configuration illustrated in
Referring to
An electrode with infused nanoparticles has a larger reaction surface than the electrode alone. To illustrate the concept, a catalytic nanoparticle 502 touches the surface of electrode 501 and collects electrons 508, splitting two surrounding water molecules within the interior of the electrolyte 504 into an H2 molecule 505 and two hydroxyl ions 507. The gas lifts the nanoparticle off the surface of the electrode 501, while a sister particle 511 replaces it to repeat the reaction. When the system is running at it's optimum, a fluidized bed is desirably established between the electrolyte, nano-catalysts and the tiny hydrogen gas bubbles. At least one aspect of the preferred embodiments includes the realization that gas or liquid does not necessarily need to be flowed into the bottom of the chamber once a fluidized bed has been established. In the described embodiments, gasses released from electrochemical reaction establish fluidization in-situ. A significant energy savings is inherent by eliminating the need for continuous pumping.
Unlike a traditional electrolyzer, whose efficiency decreases as current increases, a fluidized bed electrolyzer described in the preferred embodiments will increase in efficiency as current is increased, until a limiting current is reached in which further gas generation disrupts fluidization and the percolation pathway, ultimately lowering efficiency. Nevertheless, this limiting current at maximum efficiency is significantly higher in the devices described in the preferred embodiments compared to a traditional electrolysis system.
Additionally, reactive surface area is increased by order of magnitude by operation with catalytic nanoparticles in the fluidized bed. In addition to the surface area of the porous or reticulate electrode, and nanoparticles infused into the electrode, the system capitalizes on the additional surface area of the fluidized catalytic nanoparticles. The increased catalytic behavior of the reactive metal nanoparticles, compared to the surface of the metal substrate alone, is high due to the very large number of atoms on the surface of the nanoparticles, as shown in
The reactive metal particles can be formed through any known manufacturing technique, including, for example, but without limitation, ball milling, precipitation, plasma torch synthesis, combustion flame, exploding wires, spark erosion, ion collision, laser ablation, electron beam evaporation, and vaporization-quenching techniques such as joule heating.
Another possible technique includes feeding a material onto a heater element so as to vaporize the material in a well-controlled dynamic environment. Such technique desirably includes allowing the material vapor to flow upwardly from the heater element in a substantially laminar manner under free convection, injecting a flow of cooling gas upwardly from a position below the heater element, preferably parallel to and into contact with the upward flow of the vaporized material and at the same velocity as the vaporized material, allowing the cooling gas and vaporized material to rise and mix sufficiently long enough to allow nano-scale particles of the material to condense out of the vapor, and drawing the mixed flow of cooling gas and nano-scale particles with a vacuum into a storage chamber. Such a process is described more fully in U.S. patent Ser. No. 10/840,109, filed May 6, 2004, the entire contents of which is hereby expressly incorporated by reference.
The chemical kinetics of catalysts generally depend of the reaction of surface atoms. Having more surface atoms available will increase the rate of many chemical reactions such as combustion, electrochemical oxidation and reduction reactions, and adsorption. Extremely short electron diffusion paths, (for example, 6 atoms from the particle center to the edge in 3 nanometer particles) allow for fast transport of electrons through and into the particles for other processes. These properties give nanoparticles unique characteristics that are unlike those of corresponding conventional (micron and larger) materials. The high percentage of surface atoms enhances galvanic events such as the splitting of water molecules into its composite gasses of hydrogen and oxygen.
The reactive metal particles referenced herein are preferably selected from the group of metals from groups 3-16, and the lanthanide series. More preferably, the metals are transition metals, mixtures thereof, and alloys thereof and their respective oxides. Most preferably, the metal or metals are selected from the group consisting of nickel, iron, manganese, cobalt, tin, and silver, or combinations, alloys, and oxides thereof. The nanoparticles may be the same as, substantially the same, or entirely different materials from those chosen for the electrode. Additionally, the nanoparticles may comprise a metal core and an oxide shell having a thickness in the range from 5 to 100% of the total particle composition, wherein the metal core may be an alloy.
The foregoing description is that of preferred embodiments having certain features, aspects, and advantages in accordance with the present inventions. Various changes and modifications also may be made to the above-described embodiments without departing from the spirit and scope of the inventions.