Nitrogen-Based Fuels: Renewable Hydrogen Carriers

Gideon S. Grader*, Michael Epstein, Ayillath Kutteri Deepa, Oren Elishav, Gennady E. Shter, Bar Mosevitzky
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Israel

NH3 Fuel Conference 2017, Minneapolis, November 1, 2017
AIChE Annual Meeting, Topical Conference: NH3 Energy+

ABSTRACT

Renewable energy sources such as solar and wind suffer from an intermittent power output, making energy storage a key element in future energy infrastructure. Fuels offer both high energy densities and efficient transport compared to other energy storage alternatives. One energy storage solution is water electrolysis. However, the generated hydrogen is incompatible with the global fuel infrastructure, inhibiting its implementation as an energy vector. Storing hydrogen on carrier atoms provides a safe and convenient way to utilize and transport renewable energies. While carbon–based fuels are commonly suggested, using nitrogen as a hydrogen carrier can potentially offer a superior option.

In this talk we will present the culmination of several studies on nitrogen-based fuels. Firstly, an analysis comparing the energy-based efficiency of several carbon-based synthetic fuels to their nitrogen-based counterparts will be presented. Secondly, the effect of the equivalence ratio on the thermal autoignition of a non-carbon nitrogen-based fuel will be shown. Thirdly, the effect of Ru/Pt/Al2O3 catalysts used for effluent gas treatment of a low-carbon nitrogen-based fuel will be discussed.

Read the abstract at the AIChE website.

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RELATED NH3 FUEL CONFERENCE PAPERS

2017: Effect of Water on the Auto-Ignition of a Non-Carbon Nitrogen-Based Monofuel

Links

Gideon Grader, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
Learn more about the NH3 Fuel Conference 2017

3 responses to “Nitrogen-Based Fuels: Renewable Hydrogen Carriers

  1. Pingback: Effect of Water on the Auto-Ignition of a Non-Carbon Nitrogen-Based Monofuel | NH3 Fuel Association

  2. Pingback: N-Fuels vs. C-Fuels: Nitrogen “superior” to carbon as a hydrogen carrier – Ammonia Energy

  3. Pingback: Israeli Group Develops New Electrolysis Technology - Ammonia Energy Association

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