| The military
needs to get the sulfur out of its fuel, in order to use the fuel to produce
hydrogen for fuel cell use in the field. Fuel cells can generate the electricity
necessary to power electronic gadgets and facilitate communications, while
avoiding use of generators that are noisy and create heat signatures.
Researchers at Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory have developed a compact and rugged microchannel distillation
unit to create a light fraction of JP-8, the standard military fuel. The
JP-8 light fraction is then reacted in a catalytic process called hydrodesulfurization,
in order to remove the sulfur from the fuel. Conventional technology utilizes
hydrogen as the co-reactant with JP-8 to power the process, but it is not
available in the field. Syngas can be generated by steam reforming of the
purified fuel.
Most of the syngas is further purified
for use by the fuel cell, but a fraction of the syngas is diverted to the
hydrodesulfurization unit. The use of syngas creates some challenges, but
it appears that they have been mostly overcome in the PNNL process, and
syngas performs almost as well as pure hydrogen.
Gas phase operation of the process
allows significant increase in throughput and decrease in operating pressure
compared with conventional technology. Residual sulfur concentration in
the hydrodesulfurized fuel below five parts per million has been obtained.

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