Applied Catalysis B: Environmental, Vol.94, No.3-4, 311-317, 2010
Low CO content hydrogen production from bio-ethanol using a combined plasma reforming-catalytic water gas shift reactor
Bio-ethanol reforming was studied using a plasma-catalytic reactor for hydrogen production at low temperature and atmospheric pressure without diluent gas or external heating. The plasma applied was a DC pulse discharge (corona) plasma. The water gas shift (WGS) catalyst was put just below the cathode electrode. The discharge generated heat was effectively used for feed vaporization and the WGS reaction. The large amounts of CO (similar to 30%) in the H-2 rich gas formed in plasma reforming of ethanol (H2O/ethanol = 6) was successfully reduced to similar to 0.8% when a Pt/TiO2 and Pt-Re/TiO2 stacked bed were used for in situ WGS catalysis with a gas hourly space velocity up to 12,000 Cm-3 g(-1) h(-1). The resultant gases contain similar to 73% H-2 and similar to 23% CO2, With small amounts of CO, CH4, and C2H6, that is suitable for H-2 fuel cell use after residual CO removal. Stability tests with daily startup-shutdown showed both plasma and catalyst are stable. The plasma-catalytic system is promising for low CO content H-2 production. and could be extended to other applications. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.