| Literature DB >> 31565298 |
Enrico Chinello1, Miguel A Modestino2, Laurent Coulot3, Mathieu Ackermann3, Florian Gerlich3, Demetri Psaltis1, Christophe Moser1.
Abstract
Chlorine is a large-scale chemical commodity produced via the chloralkali process, which involves the electrolysis of brine in a membrane-based electrochemical reactor. The reaction is normally driven by grid electricity; nevertheless, the required combination of voltage-current can be guaranteed using renewable power (i.e., photovoltaic electricity). This study demonstrates an off-grid solar-powered chlorine generator that couples a novel planar solar concentrator, multijunction InGaP/GaAs/InGaAsNSb solar cells and an electrochemical cell fabricated via additive manufacturing. The planar solar concentrator consists of an array of seven custom injection-molded lenses and uses microtracking to maintain a ± 40° wide angular acceptance. Triple-junction solar cells provide the necessary potential (open-circuit voltage, V OC = 3.16 V) to drive the electrochemical reactions taking place at a De Nora DSA insoluble anode and a nickel cathode. This chloralkali generator is tested under real atmospheric conditions and operated at a record 25.1% solar-to-chemical conversion efficiency (SCE). The device represents the proof-of-principle of a new generation stand-alone chlorine production system for off-grid utilization in remote and inaccessible locations.Entities:
Keywords: chloralkali; chlorine; hydrogen; multijunction photovoltaics; solar concentrators
Year: 2017 PMID: 31565298 PMCID: PMC6607182 DOI: 10.1002/gch2.201700095
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chall ISSN: 2056-6646
Figure 1Solar chloralkali device overview. a) Optical planar concentrator, lenses array. b) Triple‐junction GaAs‐based solar cells mounted on PCB. c) Electrolyzer 3D printed metallic flow plates. d) Electrochemical cell, composed by a nickel cathode and a DSA insoluble anode, separated by cation exchange membrane.
Figure 2Insolight solar concentrator. a) Normal incidence case—optical efficiency is 100%. b) Intermediate incidence tilt. c) Assembly certified by Fraunhofer ISE. d) Certified polarization curve (direct normal irradiance 883 W m−2). e) Electrical performance of the assembly concentrator‐PV for different illumination angles, certified by Fraunhofer ISE. f) Electrical performance of the assembly concentrator‐PV corrected for the effective aperture area, certified by Fraunhofer ISE.
Figure 3a) Chloralkali device working point. Blue line and black dashed line depict the PV polarization curve certified by Fraunhofer ISE (DNI 883 W m−2) and extrapolated at DNI 1000 W m−2. The red line shows the polarization curve for the electrolyzer. b) Device operating current (6th January 2017, 12:15‐12:35). The blue line depicts the recorded current through the device, the black dashed line represents to the computed operating current (at 2.7 V); the gray symbols correspond to the intervals in which the tracking was activated. c) Device operating current (blue) and correspondent solar‐to‐chemical conversion efficiency (SCE—red). It has to be noted that the surface reference for current densities calculations is the input aperture of the solar concentrator (i.e., 4.809 cm2); the brine electrolysis load (red curve in (a)) has therefore to be scaled to the effective electrode area in order to assess the electrolyzer performance.
Figure 4a) Experimental setup for daily tracking reconstruction. Solar simulator power and beam direction are adjusted to recreate solar intensity and angle for each hour of the day. b) Relative comparison of measured and computed values (blue dots and dashed black line, respectively); darker gray region shows the ±40° solar incidence angle.