Partial oxidation (POX) is a type of chemical reaction. It occurs when a substoichiometric fuel-air mixture is partially combusted in a reformer, creating a hydrogen-rich syngas which can then be put to further use, for example in a fuel cell. A distinction is made between thermal partial oxidation (TPOX) and catalytic partial oxidation (CPOX).

Principle

edit

Partial oxidation is a technically mature process in which natural gas or a heavy hydrocarbon fuel (heating oil) is mixed with a limited amount of oxygen in an exothermic process. [1]

  • General reaction:
  • Idealized reaction for heating oil:
  • Idealized reaction for coal:

The formulas given for coal and heating oil show only a typical representative of these complex fuels. Water may be added to lower the combustion temperature and reduce soot formation. Yields are below stoichiometric due to some fuel being fully combusted to carbon dioxide and water.[citation needed]

TPOX

edit

TPOX (thermal partial oxidation) reaction temperatures are dependent on the air-fuel ratio or oxygen-fuel ratio. Typical reaction temperatures are 1200°C and above.[citation needed]

CPOX

edit

In CPOX (catalytic partial oxidation) the use of a catalyst reduces the required temperature to around 800°C – 900°C.[citation needed]

The choice of reforming technique depends on the sulfur content of the fuel being used. CPOX can be employed if the sulfur content is below 50 ppm. A higher sulfur content can poison the catalyst, so the TPOX procedure is used for such fuels. However, recent research shows that CPOX is possible with sulfur contents up to 400ppm.[2]

History

edit

1926 – Vandeveer and Parr at the University of Illinois used oxygen to replace air.[3]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Hornback, Joseph. Organic Chemistry. Brooks/Cole, Cengage Learning. pp. 146–147. ISBN 978-0-534-38951-2.
  2. ^ Electricity from wood through the combination of gasification and solid oxide fuel cells, Ph.D. Thesis by Florian Nagel, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, 2008 doi:10.3929/ethz-a-005773119
  3. ^ Industrial Gas Handbook, Frank G. Kerry, p. 230.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Transaction Processing over XML

Transaction Processing over XML (TPoX) is a computing benchmark for XML database systems. As a benchmark, TPoX is used for the performance testing of

Copts

allele frequencies across nine autosomal STR loci (D3S1358, VWA, FGA, THO1, TPOX, CSF1PO, D5S818, D13S317, and D7S820) using DNA samples from 200 unrelated

Combined DNA Index System

statistics). Loci that fall within a gene are named after the gene. For example, TPOX is named after the human thyroid peroxidase gene. Loci that do not fall within

Benchmark (computing)

Benchmark – Telecommunication Application Transaction Processing Benchmark TPoX – An XML transaction processing benchmark for XML databases VUP (VAX unit

Hydrogen production

oxidation reactor. A distinction is made between thermal partial oxidation (TPOX) and catalytic partial oxidation (CPOX). The chemical reaction takes the

Second Generation Multiplex Plus

additional markers D2S1338 and D19S433 and does not use the five markers CSF1PO, TPOX, D5S818, D7S820, D13S317. The primers are tagged with the following fluorescent

Small stationary reformer

in a fuel cell. A distinction is made between thermal partial oxidation (TPOX) and catalytic partial oxidation (CPOX). Microchannel Reformer Ion transport

Glossary of fuel cell terms

below 50 ppm. A higher sulfur content would poison the catalyst, so the TPOX procedure is used for such fuels. Cathode A cathode is an electrode through