The Helmholtz Virtual Institute (VI) SolarSynGas brings together expertise from solar energy research and materials science to develop metal oxide based redox materials and to integrate them in a suitable way into related process technologies for two-step thermochemical production of hydrogen and carbon monoxide from water and CO2. One of the foci of experimental investigation was exploring the impact of doping on the feasibility of ceria-based materials – mainly by Zr-doping. The results indicate that a certain Zr-content enhances the reducibility and therefore the splitting performance. Increasing the Zr-content to x = 0.15 improved the specific CO2-splitting performance by 50% compared to pure ceria. This finding agrees with theoretical studies attributing the improvements to lattice modification caused by the introduction of Zr4+. Thermogravimetric relaxation experiments and equilibrium oxygen isotope exchange experiments with subsequent depth profiling analysis were carried out on ceria. As a result the reduction reaction of even dense samples of pure ceria with a grain size of about 20 µm is surface reaction controlled. The structure of the derived expression for the apparent activation energy suggests that the chemical surface exchange coefficient should show only a very weak dependence on temperature for ceria doped with lower valence cations. A solar receiver reactor exhibiting a foam-type reticulated porous ceramics made of ceria was tested. It could be shown that applying dual-scale porosity to those foams with mm-size pores for effective radiative heat transfer during reduction and μm-size pores within its struts for enhanced kinetics during oxidation allows enhancing the performance of the reactor significantly. Also a particle process concept applying solid-solid heat recovery from redox particles in a high temperature solar thermochemical process was analysed that uses ceramic spheres as solid heat transfer medium. This concept can be implemented into any particle reactor and offers sufficiently high heat recovery rates and thus high overall system efficiencies. A detailed model to calculate the performance of the concept in consideration of temperature dependent material data and several other influencing factors was developed. It was found that the molar flow ratio needs to be optimized regarding the contact time and the heat recovery rate only increases slightly over a contact time of τ=10s. The system reaches a heat recovery rate over 70% in case of six stages, connected in a quasi-counter-current principle.
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31 May 2016
SOLARPACES 2015: International Conference on Concentrating Solar Power and Chemical Energy Systems
13–16 October 2015
Cape Town, South Africa
Research Article|
May 31 2016
SolarSyngas: Results from a virtual institute developing materials and key components for solar thermochemical fuel production Free
Martin Roeb;
Martin Roeb
a)
1German Aerospace Center (DLR),
Institute of Solar Research
, 51147 Köln, Germany
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Aldo Steinfeld;
Aldo Steinfeld
b)
2
ETH Zurich
, Department of Mechanical and Process Engineering, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
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Günter Borchardt;
Günter Borchardt
c)
3Technical University Clausthal,
Institute of Metallurgy
, 38678 Clausthal, Germany
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Claus Feldmann;
Claus Feldmann
d)
4Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT),
Institute of Inorganic Chemistry
, 76131 Karlsruhe, Germany
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Martin Schmücker;
Martin Schmücker
e)
5German Aerospace Center (DLR),
Institute of Material Research
, 51147 Köln, Germany
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Christian Sattler;
Christian Sattler
f)
1German Aerospace Center (DLR),
Institute of Solar Research
, 51147 Köln, Germany
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Robert Pitz-Paal
Robert Pitz-Paal
g)
1German Aerospace Center (DLR),
Institute of Solar Research
, 51147 Köln, Germany
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Martin Roeb
1,a)
Aldo Steinfeld
2,b)
Günter Borchardt
3,c)
Claus Feldmann
4,d)
Martin Schmücker
5,e)
Christian Sattler
1,f)
Robert Pitz-Paal
1,g)
1German Aerospace Center (DLR),
Institute of Solar Research
, 51147 Köln, Germany
2
ETH Zurich
, Department of Mechanical and Process Engineering, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
3Technical University Clausthal,
Institute of Metallurgy
, 38678 Clausthal, Germany
4Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT),
Institute of Inorganic Chemistry
, 76131 Karlsruhe, Germany
5German Aerospace Center (DLR),
Institute of Material Research
, 51147 Köln, Germany
AIP Conf. Proc. 1734, 120007 (2016)
Citation
Martin Roeb, Aldo Steinfeld, Günter Borchardt, Claus Feldmann, Martin Schmücker, Christian Sattler, Robert Pitz-Paal; SolarSyngas: Results from a virtual institute developing materials and key components for solar thermochemical fuel production. AIP Conf. Proc. 31 May 2016; 1734 (1): 120007. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4949209
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