International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, Vol.38, No.22, 9330-9342, 2013
Performance of a micro-thermophotovoltaic power system using an ammonia-hydrogen blend-fueled micro-emitter
The potential of ammonia (NH3)-hydrogen (H-2) blends as a carbon-free, green fuel in a 1-10W micro-thermophotovoltaic (micro-TPV) device is evaluated experimentally. When NH3-H-2 blends are used directly (without any modification) in a heat-recirculating micro-TPV configuration that has an installation of gallium antimonide (GaSb) photovoltaic cells and was developed for hydrocarbon fuel, low temperature on the micro-emitter outer surface is observed, generating a secondary flame at the micro-emitter outlet. Thus, the micro-TPV device has been modified to eliminate the secondary flame by enhancing the residence time of fed NH3-H-2-air mixtures and uniform burning a cyclone adapter for a fuel-air mixture supply system and a helical adapter for the fuel-air mixture upstream of the micro-emitter. Under optimized design and operating conditions, the micro-TPV device produces 5.2W with an overall efficiency of 2.1% and an emitter efficiency of 37%, indicating the maximum temperature of the micro-emitter outer surface up to 1408 K. Thus, the feasibility of using NH3-H-2 blends in practical micro power-generation devices has been demonstrated, implying the potential of partial NH3 substitution to improve the safety of pure H-2 use with no carbon generation. Copyright (C) 2013, Hydrogen Energy Publications, LLC. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.