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Ruthenium, one of the six platinum group metals (PGMs), is once again being given major research attention in view of it being exceptionally suited to uplifting the efficiency and sustainability of green hydrogen production from green ammonia.
Late last year, it was a ruthenium-based catalyst that augmented the scarcity of iridium, another PGM, in the production of green hydrogen from water electrolysis.
Now researchers are optimistic that ruthenium will likely boost the recovery of green hydrogen from green ammonia.
The hope is that it will do so as a key ingredient of the latest "AmmoCatCoat" innovation, which has attracted €2-million worth of three-year public funding from the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, or BMBF, as part of the Material Hub and Resource Sovereignty funding focus.
"I'm convinced that with 'AmmoCatCoat' we'll succeed in providing a more efficient and sustainable method for ammonia cracking," Heraeus Precious Metals Dr Konrad Krois stated in a release to Mining Weekly from Hanau.
With platinum and iridium PGMs tending to dominate in the hydrogen space, earlier this year Heraeus and South Africa's PGMs major Sibanye-Stillwater partnered in exploring new applications for PGMs in the hydrogen economy, focussing on how applications can also profit from the special traits of palladium, one of the six PGM elements.
Increasing demand for hydrogen purification during the production of blue hydrogen is one possible example of a palladium-based application, with further examples including the cracking of hydrogen carriers as well as applications in the semiconductor industry, where high-purity hydrogen is needed as a process gas.
In moving technologies to scale, reliable process efficiency is key, and PGMs are the most efficient providers of such competence.
In this latest ruthenium development, Heraeus will be leading a consortium of six institutes and companies in researching the use of novel, directly heated catalyst modules based on sustainable carbon, amid the energy transition needing solutions that are material-efficient and competitive in operation.
The latest €2-million, three-year project is publicly funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, or BMBF, as part of the Material Hub and Resource Sovereignty funding focus.
The Heraeus-led project consortium, which includes project partners such as Fraunhofer ISE, Leibniz Institute for Agricultural Engineering and Bioeconomy, Centre for Transmission Electron Microscopy, PYREG GmbH, and Purem by Eberspächer, combines expertise in catalysis, biomass conversion, material characterisation, and surface treatment.
The aim of the project is to provide a practical demonstration of operation under real-technical conditions at pilot plant scale. Additionally, scaling concepts will be developed.
For transport, hydrogen can be chemically stored in the form of ammonia and then released. For this chemical reaction, PGM catalysts such as ruthenium are exceptionally suitable.
To make the process as sustainable, efficient, and cost-effective as possible, the materials used need to allow operation at low temperature, have high long-term stability, and be used as sparingly as possible, and these project partners are researching how to implement these requirements in a new approach.
The project involves the catalytically active ruthenium layer being applied to an electrically heatable catalyst carrier system, which ensures direct and even heat distribution and heat being brought exactly to where it is needed. The active layer consists of nanoparticles that are finely distributed on a specially tailored carbon material.
Current research results show that the catalytic activity of ruthenium can be markedly improved by using carbon as the catalyst support.
The interaction between the carbon support and the ruthenium nanoparticles should significantly improve the...