22 research outputs found
Direct Hysteresis Heating of Catalytically Active NiâCo Nanoparticles as Steam Reforming Catalyst
We demonstrated a proof-of-concept
catalytic steam reforming flow
reactor system heated only by supported magnetic nickelâcobalt
nanoparticles in an oscillating magnetic field. The heat transfer
was facilitated by the hysteresis heating in the nickelâcobalt
nanoparticles alone. This produced a sufficient power input to equilibrate
the reaction at above 780 °C with more than 98% conversion of
methane. The high conversion of methane indicated that Co-rich nanoparticles
with a high Curie temperature provide sufficient heat to enable the
endothermic reaction, with the catalytic activity facilitated by the
Ni content in the nanoparticles. The magnetic hysteresis losses obtained
from temperature-dependent hysteresis measurements were found to correlate
well with the heat generation in the system. The direct heating of
the catalytic system provides a fast heat transfer and thereby overcomes
the heat-transfer limitation of the industrial-scale steam reformer.
This could consequently enable a more compact steam reformer design