1. Ammonia sorbent development for on-board H2 purification
- Author
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Allen Murray, Richard Chahine, Bart A. van Hassel, Daniel Cossement, Jagadeswara R. Karra, Salvatore Saita, Daniel Goberman, and Jose Santana
- Subjects
Sorbent ,Ammonia borane ,Inorganic chemistry ,Proton exchange membrane fuel cell ,Filtration and Separation ,Analytical Chemistry ,Filter (aquarium) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ammonia ,Hydrogen storage ,Adsorption ,chemistry ,medicine ,Activated carbon ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The application of chemical hydrides (e.g. ammonia borane) and amide-based hydrogen storage materials would benefit from an effective means to remove ammonia, which is an impurity that is detrimental to the performance of a PEM fuel cell. One option is to adsorb ammonia on a sorbent with high capacity that would also be regenerable. Such a sorbent was developed by impregnating super activated carbon with metal chlorides (MgCl2, ZnCl2, MnCl2). The sorbent was characterized through static and dynamic adsorption experiments. It was shown to have a good cyclic stability. The filter weight, volume and pressure drop appears reasonable for an onboard vehicle application when it would be replaced/regenerated every 1800 miles, similar to an oil change.
- Published
- 2015