Mechanistic Studies of Liquid Metal Anode SOFCs II: Development of a Coulometric Titration Technique to Aid Reactor Design

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Toleuova, Aliya
Maskell, William C.
Yufit, Vladimir
Shearing, Paul R.
Brett, Daniel J.L.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Chemical Engineering Science

Abstract

Abstract Improved understanding of the operation of liquid metal anode solid oxide fuel cells (LMA-SOFCs) is required to progress this promising energy conversion technology. In order to facilitate analysis and interpretation, initial studies have been carried out with a simple system in which hydrogen is used as the fuel and the liquid metal electrode is operated in a potential region where it effectively behaves as an ‘inert’ solvent for dissolved gases. A model for the processes taking place in a liquid tin anode (LTA) supplied with hydrogen has previously been reported which identified a key parameter, the Dynamic Oxygen Utilisation Coefficient, z̅, important for understanding the operation and design of these systems. This parameter serves a similar role to the Damköhler number, widely applied in chemical reaction engineering to relate the chemical reaction rate to the transport phenomena rate. This paper describes the development of a method, named Anodic Injection Coulometry (AIC), to determine z̅, together with an example of its application.

Description

Citation

Aliya Toleuova, William C. Maskell, Vladimir Yufit, Paul R. Shearing, Daniel J.L. Brett, Mechanistic Studies of Liquid Metal Anode SOFCs II: Development of a Coulometric Titration Technique to Aid Reactor Design, In Chemical Engineering Science, Volume 154, 2016, Pages 100-107

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By