| WEST LAFAYETTE,
Ind. – Engineers at Purdue University have developed a new way of producing
hydrogen for fuel cells to automatically recharge batteries in portable
electronics, such as notebook computers, and eliminate the need to use
a wall outlet.
The findings will be presented Sunday
( Aug. 28 ) during the annual meeting of the American Chemical Society
in Washington, D.C., and also will be detailed in a peer-reviewed paper
to appear in an upcoming issue of the journal Combustion and Flame. The
paper was written by research scientist Evgeny Shafirovich, postdoctoral
research associate Victor Diakov and Arvind Varma, the R. Games Slayter
Distinguished Professor of Chemical Engineering and head of Purdue's School
of Chemical Engineering.
The researchers developed the new
method earlier this year and envision a future system in which pellets
of hydrogen-releasing material would be contained in disposable credit-card-size
cartridges. Once the pellets were used up, a new cartridge would be inserted
into devices such as cell phones, personal digital assistants, notebook
computers, digital cameras, handheld medical diagnostic devices and defibrillators.
The method also might have military
applications in portable electronics for soldiers and for equipment in
spacecraft and submarines, Varma said.
The new technique combines two previously
known methods for producing hydrogen. The previous methods have limitations
making them impractical when used alone, but those drawbacks are overcome
when the methods are combined, Varma said.
One of the methods was invented by
Herbert C. Brown, a chemist and Nobel laureate from Purdue who discovered
a compound called sodium borohydride during World War II. The compound
contains sodium, boron and hydrogen. He later developed a technique for
producing hydrogen by combining sodium borohydride with water and a catalyst.
The method, however, has a major drawback because it requires expensive
catalysts such as ruthenium.
The other method involves a chemical
reaction in which tiny particles of aluminum are combined with water in
such a way that the aluminum ignites, releasing hydrogen during the combustion
process. This method does not require an expensive catalyst, but it yields
insufficient quantities of hydrogen to be practical for fuel cell applications.
"Our solution is to combine both
methods by using what we call a triple borohydride-metal-water mixture,
which does not require a catalyst and has a high enough hydrogen yield
to make the method promising for fuel cell applications," Varma said. "So
far we have shown in experiments that we can convert 6.7 percent of the
mixture to hydrogen, which means that for every 100 grams of mixture we
can produce nearly 7 grams of hydrogen, and that yield is already better
than alternative methods on the market."
The researchers have filed a provisional
patent application for the technique and hope to increase the yield to
about 10 percent through additional experiments, Shafirovich said.
Hydrogen produced by the method could
be used to drive a fuel cell, which then would produce electricity to charge
a battery. A computer chip would automatically detect when the battery
needed to be recharged, activating a new pellet until all of the pellets
on the cartridge were consumed. Byproducts from the reaction are environmentally
benign and can either be safely discarded or recycled, Diakov said.
In addition to its potential use
in portable electronics, the technology offers promise as an energy source
to power hardware in spacecraft.
"The Apollo 13 accident was caused
by an explosion involving liquid oxygen, which is needed along with liquid
hydrogen to feed a fuel cell in spacecraft," Shafirovich said. "Use of
chemical mixtures, such as ours, for generation of hydrogen and oxygen
would eliminate the possibility of such an explosion."
A key step in the hydrogen-producing
reaction is the use of tiny particles of aluminum only about as wide as
100 nanometers, or 100 billionths of a meter.
"You don't want to use large lumps
of aluminum because then you only get reactions on the outer surfaces of
those lumps, so you don't produce enough hydrogen," Varma said. "What you
would rather use is tiny particles that have a high surface area, which
enables them to completely react, leaving no waste and producing more hydrogen."
Another crucial component is a special
gel created by combining water with a material called polyacrylamide.
"If you want to ignite a mixture
of aluminum with water, the problem is that water boils at 100 degrees
Centigrade and aluminum ignites at a much higher temperature," Shafirovich
said. "So, if you try to ignite the mixture you just vaporize water and
the aluminum doesn't ignite.
"When we use this gel, water boils
at a much higher temperature, and the nanoscale powder also decreases the
ignition temperature of aluminum. So you are both increasing the boiling
point of water and decreasing the ignition temperature of aluminum, making
the reaction possible."
The researchers believe they will
be able to safely dissipate the heat produced by the reaction, making the
technology practical for portable electronics.
This research is supported by the
Purdue Hydrogen Economy initiative of the College of Engineering and is
being conducted as a part of Purdue's new Energy Center, created this year
at the university's Discovery Park.
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