NATERER, G, et al. “Multiphase Reactor Scale-up for Cu–Cl Thermochemical Hydrogen Production”. International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, vol. 33, no. 23, 2008, pp. 6934-46, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhydene.2008.08.050.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: NATERER, G
Author: GABRIEL, K
Author: WANG, Z
Date Issued
2008
Abstract

This paper examines selected design issues associated with reactor scale-up in the thermochemical copper–chlorine (Cu–Cl) cycle of hydrogen production. The thermochemical cycle decomposes water into oxygen and hydrogen, through intermediate copper and chlorine compounds. In this paper, emphasis is focused on the hydrogen, oxygen and hydrolysis reactors. A sedimentation cell for copper separation and HCl gas absorption tower are discussed for the thermochemical hydrogen reactor. A molten salt reactor is investigated for decomposition of an intermediate compound, copper oxychloride (CuO·Cl2), into oxygen gas and molten cuprous chloride. Scale-up design issues are examined for handling three phases within the molten salt reactor, i.e., solid copper oxychloride particles, liquid (melting salt) and exiting gas (oxygen). Also, different variations of hydrolysis reactions are compared, including 5, 3 and 2-step Cu–Cl cycles that utilize reactive spray drying, instead of separate drying and hydrolysis processes. The spray drying involves evaporation of aqueous feed by mixing the spray and drying streams. Results are presented for the required capacities of feed materials for the multiphase reactors, steam and heat requirements, and other key design parameters for reactor scale-up to a pilot-scale capacity.

Language

  • English
Funding Note
Ontario Research Excellence Fund
Atomic Energy of Canada Limited
Page range
6934-6946
Host Title
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
Host Abbreviated Title
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
Volume
33
Issue
23
Part Date
2008-12
ISSN
03603199