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High
Efficiency, Low-Cost Reforming to Produce Hydrogen—TDA
Research, Inc., 12345 W. 52nd Avenue, Wheat Ridge, CO
80033-1916; 303-940-2300, http://www.tda.com
Dr.
Jeannine E. Elliott, Principal Investigator, jelliott@tda.com
Mr.
John D. Wright, Business Official, jdwright@tda.com
DOE
Grant No. DE-FG02-05ER84215
Amount:
$750,000
Current
natural gas reforming plants that produce hydrogen are expensive because of the
large capital cost associated with the reformers. The
heat required to drive the reforming reaction is transferred in a fired-furnace
through heat exchanger tubes. These
tubes are extraordinarily expensive because they are high nickel alloys, which
cost ten times as much as carbon steel, and have thick walls to run at high
temperatures (up to 900 °C) and high pressures (400-500 psi).
In addition, the efficiency of current reformers is limited by the
temperature at which they operate, which is in turn limits the operating
temperature of the reformer tubes. This
project will develop a steam reforming system for the production of hydrogen,
which uses direct combustion to generate heat reforming, instead of using
combustion in a fired-furnace reformer. In
Phase I, experimental research, system design, and cost analysis studies were
used to show that the new hydrogen-generation
approach can reduce capital cost, increase methane conversion efficiency, and
reduce the cost of hydrogen. In
Phase II, a new test apparatus will be built to demonstrate the performance of
the entire system. Also, a full
system design and an economic analysis for a large-scale plant operation will be
conducted.
Commercial Applications and other Benefits as
described by the awardee: The new process should reduce the cost of hydrogen
from natural gas, while increasing efficiency and emitting far less carbon
dioxide to the atmosphere. U.S.
demand for hydrogen is now about nine million tons per year, and growing
rapidly.