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    Carbon Deposition Simulation in Porous SOFC Anodes: A Detailed Numerical Analysis of Major Carbon Precursors

    Source: Journal of Fuel Cell Science and Technology:;2015:;volume( 012 ):;issue: 005::page 51007
    Author:
    Schluckner, C.
    ,
    Subotiؤ‡, V.
    ,
    Lawlor, V.
    ,
    Hochenauer, C.
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4031862
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs) can be operated on a wide range of fuels, including hydrocarbons. Such a fuel supply includes the risk of carbon formation on the catalytically active nickel centers within the porous anodic substrate. Coking is very critical for the reliability and durability of the SOFCs. Thus, within this study, coking propensity of the most prominent carbon containing fuels was analyzed by thermodynamic equilibrium calculations for two fundamentally different types of carbon and detailed transient numerical simulations based on heterogeneous reforming kinetics. This approach is new to the literature and reveals the strengths and weaknesses of both fundamentally different approaches. It was shown that in thermodynamic equilibrium calculations, carbon formation is most likely due to pure methane. Carbon monoxide will form the least amounts of carbon in typical SOFC temperature ranges. Furthermore, based on a validated computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation model, detailed heterogeneous reaction kinetics were used to directly simulate elementary carbon adsorbed to the reactive substrate surface. The amounts, spatial and temporal distribution, of carbon atoms within the porous structure were identified between 600 آ°C and 1000 آ°C for a broad steamtocarbon ratio range of 0.5–2. It was shown that most carbon is formed at the beginning of the substrate. A key finding was that steadystate results differ greatly from results within the first few seconds of fuel supply. An increment in temperature causes a significant increase in the amount of carbon formed, making the highest temperatures the most critical for the SOFC operation. Moreover, it was shown that mixtures of pure methane deliver the highest amounts of adsorbed elementary carbon. Equimolar mixtures of CH4/CO cause second highest surface coverages. Pure carbon monoxide blends led to least significant carbon formations. This work has shown the important contribution that thermodynamic equilibrium calculation results, as well as the outcomes of the detailed CFD simulations, allow to identify suitable operating conditions for the SOFC systems and to minimize the risk of coking on porous anodes.
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      Carbon Deposition Simulation in Porous SOFC Anodes: A Detailed Numerical Analysis of Major Carbon Precursors

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    contributor authorSchluckner, C.
    contributor authorSubotiؤ‡, V.
    contributor authorLawlor, V.
    contributor authorHochenauer, C.
    date accessioned2017-05-09T01:19:29Z
    date available2017-05-09T01:19:29Z
    date issued2015
    identifier issn2381-6872
    identifier otherfc_012_05_051007.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/158404
    description abstractSolid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs) can be operated on a wide range of fuels, including hydrocarbons. Such a fuel supply includes the risk of carbon formation on the catalytically active nickel centers within the porous anodic substrate. Coking is very critical for the reliability and durability of the SOFCs. Thus, within this study, coking propensity of the most prominent carbon containing fuels was analyzed by thermodynamic equilibrium calculations for two fundamentally different types of carbon and detailed transient numerical simulations based on heterogeneous reforming kinetics. This approach is new to the literature and reveals the strengths and weaknesses of both fundamentally different approaches. It was shown that in thermodynamic equilibrium calculations, carbon formation is most likely due to pure methane. Carbon monoxide will form the least amounts of carbon in typical SOFC temperature ranges. Furthermore, based on a validated computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation model, detailed heterogeneous reaction kinetics were used to directly simulate elementary carbon adsorbed to the reactive substrate surface. The amounts, spatial and temporal distribution, of carbon atoms within the porous structure were identified between 600 آ°C and 1000 آ°C for a broad steamtocarbon ratio range of 0.5–2. It was shown that most carbon is formed at the beginning of the substrate. A key finding was that steadystate results differ greatly from results within the first few seconds of fuel supply. An increment in temperature causes a significant increase in the amount of carbon formed, making the highest temperatures the most critical for the SOFC operation. Moreover, it was shown that mixtures of pure methane deliver the highest amounts of adsorbed elementary carbon. Equimolar mixtures of CH4/CO cause second highest surface coverages. Pure carbon monoxide blends led to least significant carbon formations. This work has shown the important contribution that thermodynamic equilibrium calculation results, as well as the outcomes of the detailed CFD simulations, allow to identify suitable operating conditions for the SOFC systems and to minimize the risk of coking on porous anodes.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleCarbon Deposition Simulation in Porous SOFC Anodes: A Detailed Numerical Analysis of Major Carbon Precursors
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume12
    journal issue5
    journal titleJournal of Fuel Cell Science and Technology
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4031862
    journal fristpage51007
    journal lastpage51007
    identifier eissn2381-6910
    treeJournal of Fuel Cell Science and Technology:;2015:;volume( 012 ):;issue: 005
    contenttypeFulltext
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