International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, Vol.36, No.22, 14771-14778, 2011
Methanol reformer integrated phosphoric acid fuel cell (PAFC) based compact plant for field deployment
Naval Material Research Laboratory (NMRL), based on the firm confidence of her core competence on material development, started an ambitious program on development of fuel cells for various Defense and non-Defense application in early nineties. The primary emphasis of this program is to develop phosphoric acid fuel cell (PAFC) based power plants integrated with hydrogen generators along with other accessories. In the process of development, it is understood that online generation of hydrogen from a liquid fuel is the key to success. Methanol, a liquid fuel, can be reformed easily with few side products and the resultant hydrogen rich reformer gas can be directly fed to a PAFC. Such configuration keeps the basic system simple and free of complicated filters and instrumentation. NMRL has developed a series of catalytic burners with high efficiency as the primary heat transfer source from the hot catalytic surface is based on conduction rather than convection as is done normally. Vaporizer is a coiled arrangement and reformer is hollow sections filled with Cu/Al(2)O(3)/ZnO catalyst, and the same is integrated with catalytic burners. Such arrangement is modular in nature and each reformer has hydrogen generation capacity of 90 lpm and start-up time is around half an hour. Modular design of reformer reactor allow them to used in different capacity plants such as a 2 kW plant configured with a reformer reactor with two vaporizer and 15 kW plant configured with seven nos. of reformer reactors and seven no. of vaporizer. The waste heat of the fuel cell and the same from the reformer burner flue is used to meet most of the reformer heat load. The catalytic burner of the reformer burns both waste hydrogen and methanol with very little excess air. PAFC being tolerant to CO (up to 1%) can be directly operated with the hydrogen rich reformer gas and the lean gas from the fuel cell is burnt into the reformer system. The raw DC output power is converted into either 100 VDC or 220 V single phase, 50 Hz sinusoidal AC power through appropriate power electronics. These configurations give overall efficiency of the plant to around 35-40 % based on LHV of Hydrogen. A battery bank is also incorporated to cater for the plant start-up and other temporary auxiliary power which get charged from the fuel cell output. Such configuration lead to the development of methanol reformer integrated PAFC based power plants of capacity ranging from 2 kW to 15 kW. The system is designed for continuous power production in the field. These plants are suitable for remote area, distributed power generation and application such as battery charging, domestic load etc. Copyright (C) 2011, Hydrogen Energy Publications, LLC. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Methanol steam reforming;PAFC/PEMFC based plant for stationary application;Catalytic burner