Catalyst Cracks Ethanol for Fuel Cells

This obscure item is actually rather good news. Available methods, as mentioned were chemically slow and also likely very inefficient. My own exposure to the problem was to discover that the best chemical method filled the membrane up with chalk. Oh well.

We have already understood that the best available liquid fuel for long term transportation will be ethanol. We can produce it easily today using cattail starch and possibly will also be able to convert the cellulose. This can be accomplished in the volumes necessary without disturbing food production.

The idea of using an ethanol fuel converter to produce hydrogen and to use that hydrogen to produce current through a fuel cell is attractive and likely very efficient.

Most important, it can step into situations where an EEStor style battery based system will likely never be acceptable such as long haul trucking in general.

I particularly draw attention to the following quote:

"The ability to split the carbon-carbon bond and generate CO2 at room temperature is a completely new feature of catalysis," Adzic said. "There are no other catalysts that can achieve this at practical potentials."

If we can extend a similar capability to the conversion of methane and other hydrocarbons and even other organic molecules, then we have an actual shortcut in the production of hydrogen for powering fuel cells. This certainly gives it to us for ethanol which is certainly a giant first step.

Up to this point one was forced to imagine needle forges, pyrolyzing methane perhaps to break out the hydrogen. It would plausibly work for hydrazine but nothing else. Now we have a room temperature process that produces CO2 and hydrogen. Does it get any better?


New Catalyst Paves The Path For Ethanol - Powered Fuel Cells

http://www.biofueldaily.com/reports/New_Catalyst_Paves_The_Path_For_Ethanol_Powered_Fuel_Cells_999.html

http://www.energy-daily.com/images/ternary-electrocatalyst-ethanol-oxidation-sm.jpg

Model of a ternary electrocatalyst for ethanol oxidation consisting of platinum-rhodium clusters on a surface of tin dioxide. This catalyst can split the carbon-carbon bond and oxidize ethanol to carbon dioxide within fuel cells.

by Staff Writers
Upton NY (SPX) Jan 29, 2009

A team of scientists at the U.S. Department of
Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory, in collaboration with researchers from the University of Delaware and Yeshiva University, has developed a new catalyst that could make ethanol-powered fuel cells feasible.
The highly efficient catalyst performs two crucial, and previously unreachable steps needed to oxidize ethanol and produce clean energy in fuel cell reactions. Their results are published online in the January 25, 2009 edition of Nature Materials.

Like batteries that never die, hydrogen fuel cells convert hydrogen and oxygen into water and, as part of the process, produce electricity.

However, efficient production, storage, and transport of hydrogen for fuel cell use is not easily achieved. As an alternative, researchers are studying the incorporation of hydrogen-rich compounds, for example, the use of liquid ethanol in a system called a direct ethanol fuel cell.

"Ethanol is one of the most ideal reactants for fuel cells," said Brookhaven chemist Radoslav Adzic. "It's easy to produce, renewable, nontoxic, relatively easy to transport, and it has a high energy density. In addition, with some alterations, we could reuse the infrastructure that's currently in place to store and distribute gasoline."

A major hurdle to the commercial use of direct ethanol fuel cells is the molecule's slow, inefficient oxidation, which breaks the compound into hydrogen
ions and electrons that are needed to generate electricity. Specifically, scientists have been unable to find a catalyst capable of breaking the bonds between ethanol's carbon atoms.

But at Brookhaven, scientists have found a winner. Made of platinum and rhodium atoms on carbon-supported tin dioxide nanoparticles, the research team's electrocatalyst is capable of breaking carbon bonds at room temperature and efficiently oxidizing ethanol into
carbon dioxide as the main reaction product. Other catalysts, by comparison, produce acetalhyde and acetic acid as the main products, which make them unsuitable for power generation.
"The ability to split the carbon-carbon bond and generate CO2 at room temperature is a completely new feature of catalysis," Adzic said. "There are no other catalysts that can achieve this at practical potentials."

Structural and electronic properties of the electrocatalyst were determined using powerful x-ray absorption techniques at Brookhaven's National Synchrotron Light Source, combined with data from transmission electron microscopy analyses at Brookhaven's Center for Functional Nanomaterials.

Based on these studies and calculations, the researchers predict that the high activity of their ternary catalyst results from the synergy between all three constituents - platinum, rhodium, and tin dioxide - knowledge that could be applied to other
alternative energy applications.

"These findings can open new possibilities of research not only for electrocatlysts and fuel cells but also for many other catalytic processes," Adzic said.

Next, the researchers will test the new catalyst in a real fuel cell in order to observe its unique characteristics first hand.

This work is supported by the Office of Basic Energy Sciences within DOE's Office of Science.

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