APS April Meeting 2013
Volume 58, Number 4
Saturday–Tuesday, April 13–16, 2013;
Denver, Colorado
Session J6: Invited Session: Low Carbon Transportation
1:30 PM–3:18 PM,
Sunday, April 14, 2013
Room: Governor's Square 15
Sponsoring
Units:
GERA FPS
Chair: Valerie Thomas, Georgia Institute of Technology
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.APR.J6.2
Abstract: J6.00002 : SUNgas: Thermochemical Approaches to Solar Fuels
2:06 PM–2:42 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Jane Davidson
(University of Minnesota)
Solar energy offers an intelligent solution to reduce anthropogenic
emissions of greenhouse gases and to meet an expanding global demand for
energy. A transformative change from fossil to solar energy requires
collection, storage, and transport of the earth's most abundant but diffuse
and intermittent source of energy. One intriguing approach for harvest and
storage of solar energy is production of clean fuels via high temperature
thermochemical processes. Concentrated solar energy is the heat source and
biomass or water and carbon dioxide are the feedstocks. Two routes to
produce fuels using concentrated solar energy and a renewable feed stock
will be discussed: gasification of biomass or other carbonaceous materials
and metal oxide cycles to produce synthesis gas.
The first and most near term route to solar fuels is to gasify biomass. With
conventional gasification, air or oxygen is supplied at fuel-rich levels to
combust some of the feedstock and in this manner generate the energy
required for conversion to H$_{2}$ and CO. The partial-combustion consumes
up to 40{\%} of the energetic value of the feedstock. With air combustion,
the product gas is diluted by high levels of CO$_{2}$ and N$_{2}$. Using
oxygen reduces the product dilution, but at the expense of adding an oxygen
plant. Supplying the required heat with concentrated solar radiation
eliminates the need for partial combustion of the biomass feedstock. As a
result, the product gas has an energetic value greater than that of the
feedstock and it is not contaminated by the byproducts of combustion.
The second promising route to solar fuels splits water and carbon dioxide.
Two-step metal-oxide redox cycles hold out great potential because they the
temperature required to achieve a reasonable degree of dissociation is lower
than direct thermal dissociation and O$_{2}$ and the fuel are produced in
separate steps. The 1$^{st}$ step is the endothermic thermal dissociation of
the metal oxide to the metal or lower-valence metal oxide. The 2$^{nd}$
exothermic step is the hydrolysis of the reduced metal to form H$_{2}$ and
the corresponding metal oxide. Two promising options for 2-step cycles, the
Zn/ZnO and non-stoichiometric ceria redox cycles, will be compared with a
focus on efficiency and state of the art achievements.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.APR.J6.2