11 research outputs found

    Electrified methane reforming:Elucidating transient phenomena

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    Increasing implementation of renewable energy requires an infrastructure compatible with the intermittent production of green electricity. Herein we show the flexibility of electrically heated steam methane reforming with integrated ohmic heating, through a combination of CFD modelling and lab scale reactor tests. It is shown how start-up from an idle state to operation conditions can be achieved with instantaneous application of the full power required for a steady state conversion of 80%, with initial heating rates exceeding 50 °C/min. The initial heating rate is correlated to the thermal mass of the reactor, with the endothermic reaction governing the temperature profile. Cyclical operation displays no apparent delay between the change in temperature and methane conversion. The highest thermal gradient across the washcoat is predicted at steady state, with no increase during start-up despite the higher heating rates. The highest risk of carbon formation is predicted at the inlet at steady state operation. A temporarily peak in the equilibrated carbon potential is predicted near the outlet during start-up and shutdown between 500 and 600 °C, governed by the thermodynamics of the feed composition. Integrated ohmic heating supports steam methane reforming scalable to industrial conditions, operating closer to thermodynamic limits for carbon formation, and potentially based on the access to intermittent excess of renewable energy.</p

    Retrofittable plug-flow reactor for in situ high-temperature vibrating sample magnetometry with well-controlled gas atmospheres

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    We have developed an in situ sample-holder—akin to a quartz-based plug-flow reactor—for vibrating sample magnetometry (VSM) in gas-controlled environments at ambient pressure and temperatures up to ∼1000 °C. The holder matches onto a specific type of vibrating sample magnetometer (Lake Shore model 7404-S), but the principles are applicable to other types of VSM. The holder has been tested on powder samples of Co particles on a MgAl2O4 support in both reducing and oxidizing atmospheres. The results show control of gas composition and sample reduction/oxidation. In comparison with conventional sample cups, the in situ holder shows a similar measurement sensitivity but a better repeatability due to the well-controlled gas atmosphere. Moreover, the in situ holder uses a closed gas tubing system such that the active gas only passes by the sample and it is not in contact with the VSM and oven parts. At the outlet, the gas can be collected for analysis and safe handling

    Corrigendum to “Quantification of lipoprotein profiles by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and multivariate data analysis”

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    The authors regret that there was an error in the published Table 2. Wrong literature reference numbers were given in Table 2 making the interpretation of the table very confusing to the reader. Table 2 should be replaced with the following corrected table.</p
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