| Room
temperature is warm enough: hydrogen for fuel cells from formic acid
One
of the central challenges of our time is the supply of enough environmentally
friendly and resource-efficient energy to our society. In this context,
hydrogen technology has taken on increased importance. Björn Loges,
Albert Boddien, Henrik Junge, and Matthias Beller at the Leibniz Institute
of Catalysis in Rostock have now succeeded in the controlled extraction
of hydrogen from formic acid—without the need for the high-temperature
reforming process usually involved in other hydrogen generation systems.
As they report in the journal Angewandte Chemie, this hydrogen source,
generated at room temperature, can be directly introduced into fuel cells.
Hydrogen-powered fuel cells are
the cleanest source of energy because they only produce one type of exhaust
gas: water vapor. However, it is not yet practicable to transport and store
hydrogen, which is a gas and cannot be pumped into a tank as easily as
gasoline. Storage systems currently in use are large and heavy, expensive,
and complex. It would thus be better to couple the fuel cell directly to
a hydrogen-producing material, which would supply the fuel cell on demand.
Aside from methane and methanol, renewable resources such as biomass and
its fermentation products (e.g. bioethanol) are the most promising starting
materials for this technology. The serious disadvantage is that their conversion
only works at temperatures above 200 °C, which consumes a significant
portion of the energy produced.
The researchers from Rostock
have now developed a feasible process for the on-demand release of hydrogen;
they produce hydrogen from formic acid (HCO2H). In the presence of an amine
(e.g. N,N-dimethylhexylamine) and with a suitable catalyst (e.g. the commercially
available ruthenium phosphine complex [RuCl2(PPH3)2]), formic acid is selectively
converted into carbon dioxide and hydrogen at room temperature. A simple
activated charcoal filter is enough to purify the hydrogen gas for use
in a fuel cell. The use of formic acid for “hydrogen storage” allows the
advantages of established hydrogen/oxygen fuel cell technology to be combined
with those of liquid fuels. Formic acid is nontoxic and easy to store.
Because formic acid can be generated catalytically from CO2 and biomass-derived
hydrogen, the cycle is CO2 neutral in principle.
Will we be replacing gasoline
with formic acid in the future" It is not inconceivable, but initial applications
requiring smaller amounts of energy are more probable. “For the use of
fuel cells in portable electrical devices,” says Beller, “this nascent
formic acid technology opens up new possibilities in the short term.”
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Author: Matthias Beller, Universität
Rostock (Germany), http://www.catalysis.de/Beller-Matthias.239.0.html
Title: Controlled generation
of hydrogen from formic acid amine adducts at room temperature and application
in H2/O2 fuel cells
Angewandte Chemie International
Edition 2008, 47, No. 21, 3962–3965, doi: 10.1002/anie.200705972 |