| Advances
in fuel desulfurization and reforming lead to a successful demonstration
of a portable fuel cell system using JP-8 military jet fuel
RICHLAND,
Wash.--Two core technologies developed at the Department of Energy’s
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - a fuel desulfurization system and
a fuel reforming system - were instrumental in the demonstration of an
electric power system operating on JP-8, a fuel commonly used in military
operations.
Portable fuel cell power units are
quieter, more efficient and have lower emissions than standard diesel generators,
but are challenged when used with JP-8 fuel because of its sulfur content.
The fuel desulfurization and reforming systems developed at PNNL reduce
the sulfur content of JP-8 and generate a hydrogen stream compatible with
an integrated fuel cell.
“Running a noisy, hot generator in
a war zone is inefficient and can give away your position,” said Dale King,
project manager at PNNL. “Not running it can leave you without power for
communications and other critical systems.”
Although currently under development
for military use, the desulfurization and reforming technologies can be
used with different liquid fuels to provide portable power almost anywhere
that small size and high performance are important. Researchers at PNNL
are also extending the desulfurization technology for use with diesel fuel.
The fuel cell-centric auxiliary power
unit is modular and can be reconfigured for a wide range of uses. Researchers
envision the technology being used to supply auxiliary power and heat for
long-haul commercial trucks, which would replace the need to run less efficient
internal combustion engines while the vehicle is stopped. Battelle, which
operates PNNL for DOE, operated a prototype system demonstrating these
technologies during the three-day 2007 Fuel Cell Seminar this fall. During
the demonstration, an integrated 5-kilowatt electric power system successfully
powered area lights and a commercial refrigerator.
A unique catalytic hydrodesulfurization
process developed by PNNL removes sulfur from the JP-8 fuel using syngas
as the co-reactant in place of hydrogen. Gas phase operation of the process
allows for a significant increase in throughput and decrease in operating
pressure compared with conventional technology. The process doesn’t require
consumables or periodic regeneration. The system was developed with funding
from the U.S. Army Tank Automotive Research, Development and Engineering
Center.
Fuel cells combine hydrogen and oxygen
to produce electrical energy with water and heat as by-products. The process
is clean, quiet and highly efficient – potentially up to three times more
efficient than internal combustion engines. Envisioned benefits include
reduced emissions, increased reliability, multi-fuel capability, durability
and ease of maintenance.
PNNL is a DOE Office of Science national
laboratory that solves complex problems in energy, national security and
the environment, and advances scientific frontiers in the chemical, biological,
materials, environmental and computational sciences. PNNL employs 4,200
staff, has a $750 million annual budget, and has been managed by Ohio-based
Battelle since the lab's inception in 1965. |