Utilization of Crystalline and Amorphous Silica as a Sintering Inhibitor in Iron/Iron Oxide Thermochemical Water Splitting Cycle

Hydrogen as a chemical fuel and energy carrier can provide the path to solar energy storage to overcome the intermittency issues. Hydrogen can be produced by various methods; among them is the thermochemical water splitting of metal/metal oxide reduction oxidization (redox) reactions. Many redox cyc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fotouh Al-Ragom
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Chemical Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fceng.2021.676532/full
_version_ 1818647728130883584
author Fotouh Al-Ragom
author_facet Fotouh Al-Ragom
author_sort Fotouh Al-Ragom
collection DOAJ
description Hydrogen as a chemical fuel and energy carrier can provide the path to solar energy storage to overcome the intermittency issues. Hydrogen can be produced by various methods; among them is the thermochemical water splitting of metal/metal oxide reduction oxidization (redox) reactions. Many redox cycles were identified, including the non-volatile redox pair, such as the iron/iron oxide. This redox pair has the capability to produce Hydrogen with rapid reaction rates especially when it is used in powder form due to the high specific reactive surface area. Yet, this pair suffers from sintering at temperatures exceeding 500°C. Sintering adversely affects the Hydrogen production process and inhibits the recycling of the powder. To overcome sintering, experimental investigations using elemental iron and silica were conducted as detailed in this paper. The oxidation of elemental iron (Fe) powder by steam to produce Hydrogen was carried out using a fluidized bed reactor. The investigations aimed at developing a practical sintering inhibition technique that can allow repeated redox cycles, stabilize the powder reactivity, and maintain Hydrogen production. The experimental investigations involved varying the fluidized bed temperature between 630–968°C. The steam mass flow rate was set to 2 g/min. To inhibit sintering, solid-state mixing of crystalline, or amorphous silica with porous iron powder was used at various iron/silica volume fractions. The investigations showed that mixing iron with silica hinders the sintering but reduces the Hydrogen yield. Mixing iron with crystalline silica with 0.5, 0.67, and 0.75 apparent volume fraction reduces the Hydrogen yield compared to pure iron by 20, 30, and 45%, respectively. Mixing iron with amorphous silica reduces the Hydrogen yield by 35 and 45%, as compared to pure iron, for iron 0–250 and 125–355 µm particle size distribution, respectively. The Hydrogen production rate for iron/amorphous silica mixtures surpassed that of the iron/crystalline silica. Mixing iron with amorphous silica prevented sintering at elevated bed temperatures in the range of 850°C, and only clumping occurred. The clumped samples restored their original powder condition with minimum agitation. Thus, solid-state mixing of amorphous silica with iron powder can be a promising technique to retard iron/iron oxide particles sintering.
first_indexed 2024-12-17T01:07:08Z
format Article
id doaj.art-9a3fb0f3e6004a0a9a0340e51aed9261
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2673-2718
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-17T01:07:08Z
publishDate 2021-06-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
series Frontiers in Chemical Engineering
spelling doaj.art-9a3fb0f3e6004a0a9a0340e51aed92612022-12-21T22:09:15ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Chemical Engineering2673-27182021-06-01310.3389/fceng.2021.676532676532Utilization of Crystalline and Amorphous Silica as a Sintering Inhibitor in Iron/Iron Oxide Thermochemical Water Splitting CycleFotouh Al-RagomHydrogen as a chemical fuel and energy carrier can provide the path to solar energy storage to overcome the intermittency issues. Hydrogen can be produced by various methods; among them is the thermochemical water splitting of metal/metal oxide reduction oxidization (redox) reactions. Many redox cycles were identified, including the non-volatile redox pair, such as the iron/iron oxide. This redox pair has the capability to produce Hydrogen with rapid reaction rates especially when it is used in powder form due to the high specific reactive surface area. Yet, this pair suffers from sintering at temperatures exceeding 500°C. Sintering adversely affects the Hydrogen production process and inhibits the recycling of the powder. To overcome sintering, experimental investigations using elemental iron and silica were conducted as detailed in this paper. The oxidation of elemental iron (Fe) powder by steam to produce Hydrogen was carried out using a fluidized bed reactor. The investigations aimed at developing a practical sintering inhibition technique that can allow repeated redox cycles, stabilize the powder reactivity, and maintain Hydrogen production. The experimental investigations involved varying the fluidized bed temperature between 630–968°C. The steam mass flow rate was set to 2 g/min. To inhibit sintering, solid-state mixing of crystalline, or amorphous silica with porous iron powder was used at various iron/silica volume fractions. The investigations showed that mixing iron with silica hinders the sintering but reduces the Hydrogen yield. Mixing iron with crystalline silica with 0.5, 0.67, and 0.75 apparent volume fraction reduces the Hydrogen yield compared to pure iron by 20, 30, and 45%, respectively. Mixing iron with amorphous silica reduces the Hydrogen yield by 35 and 45%, as compared to pure iron, for iron 0–250 and 125–355 µm particle size distribution, respectively. The Hydrogen production rate for iron/amorphous silica mixtures surpassed that of the iron/crystalline silica. Mixing iron with amorphous silica prevented sintering at elevated bed temperatures in the range of 850°C, and only clumping occurred. The clumped samples restored their original powder condition with minimum agitation. Thus, solid-state mixing of amorphous silica with iron powder can be a promising technique to retard iron/iron oxide particles sintering.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fceng.2021.676532/fullredoxsinteringhydrogenwater splittingthermochemical
spellingShingle Fotouh Al-Ragom
Utilization of Crystalline and Amorphous Silica as a Sintering Inhibitor in Iron/Iron Oxide Thermochemical Water Splitting Cycle
Frontiers in Chemical Engineering
redox
sintering
hydrogen
water splitting
thermochemical
title Utilization of Crystalline and Amorphous Silica as a Sintering Inhibitor in Iron/Iron Oxide Thermochemical Water Splitting Cycle
title_full Utilization of Crystalline and Amorphous Silica as a Sintering Inhibitor in Iron/Iron Oxide Thermochemical Water Splitting Cycle
title_fullStr Utilization of Crystalline and Amorphous Silica as a Sintering Inhibitor in Iron/Iron Oxide Thermochemical Water Splitting Cycle
title_full_unstemmed Utilization of Crystalline and Amorphous Silica as a Sintering Inhibitor in Iron/Iron Oxide Thermochemical Water Splitting Cycle
title_short Utilization of Crystalline and Amorphous Silica as a Sintering Inhibitor in Iron/Iron Oxide Thermochemical Water Splitting Cycle
title_sort utilization of crystalline and amorphous silica as a sintering inhibitor in iron iron oxide thermochemical water splitting cycle
topic redox
sintering
hydrogen
water splitting
thermochemical
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fceng.2021.676532/full
work_keys_str_mv AT fotouhalragom utilizationofcrystallineandamorphoussilicaasasinteringinhibitorinironironoxidethermochemicalwatersplittingcycle