Rеvuе des Energies Renouvelables
Volume 9, Numéro 3, Pages 121-126
2006-09-30
Authors : Konstandopoulos A.g. . Agrofiotis C. .
The HYDROSOL research team has developed an innovative solar thermo-chemical reactor for the production of hydrogen from water splitting, constructed from special refractory ceramic thin-wall, multi-channeled (honeycomb) monoliths that absorb solar radiation. The monolith channels are coated with active water-splitting materials capable to split water vapor passing through the reactor by ‘trapping’ its oxygen and leaving in the effluent gas stream as product pure hydrogen. In a next step, the oxygen ‘trapping’ material is solar-aided regenerated (i.e. releases the oxygen absorbed) and hence a cyclic operation is established. The first kind of such a pilot-scale reactor was designed, built and is currently operating in a continuous mode at a solar furnace facility, producing hydrogen by cyclic operation exclusively at the expense of solar energy; up to 40 cycles of constant H2 production were operated in a row in a two-day continuous production of hydrogen. Further scale-up of the technology and its effective coupling with solar concentration systems are in progress to demonstrate large-scale feasibility of a ‘solar hydrogen’ production plant. Such plants can offer new opportunities to regions of the world that have a huge ‘solar potential’ like countries of Maghreb, that can become important local producers of ‘clean hydrogen’.
Hydrosol, Solar thermo-chemical reactor, Water splitting.
Imanova Gunel
.
pages 17-22.
Zioui D
.
, Bellatreche R
.
Tigrine Z
.
Aburideh H
.
pages 197-206.
Benoudjit Fouzia
.
Hamoudi Imene
.
Aboulouz Asmaa
.
pages 2842-2849.
Maher Lakkaichi
.
Nawel Outili
.
Saci Nacef
.
pages 45-52.