Title
Leakage evolution and atomic-scale changes in Pd-based membranes induced by long-term hydrogen permeation
Author
Peters, T.A.
Carvalho, P.A.
van Wees, J.F.
Overbeek, J.P.
Sagvolden, E.
van Berkel, F.P.F.
Løvvik, O.M.
Bredesen, R.
Publication year
2018
Abstract
The long-term operation of a ceramic-supported 5 μm-thick Pd membrane at 450 °C and 27 bar with a feed representing steam-methane-reforming conditions has been monitored over a period of 100 days. Subsequently, a thorough characterisation of the exposed membrane has been performed to investigate leakage behavior and microstructural changes to the membrane occurring during the long-term membrane operation. Initially, a H2 permeance of 2.8·10−4 mol m−2 s−1 Pa−0.5 and a H2 permeate purity of 99.8% have been obtained. During continuous operation over 100 days, however, a slow but gradual decrease in H2 purity has been observed at a close-to-constant H2 permeance. Post-process leakage behavior has indicated that the increase in leakage is mainly caused by an increase in the Knudsen flow contribution, reflecting an increase in either the amount or size of nano-sized defects. A rising water test shows that these nano-sized defects are almost evenly distributed over the membrane length. Observation of the membrane cross-section revealed the formation of cavities that grew to sizes up to tens of nanometers, as a result of molecular recombination of hydrogen at low-energy sites such as dislocation walls and high-angle grain boundaries. The spherical shapes of the bubbles point to these being energetically favorable, which may be consistent with comparably high surface tensions. Therefore, the cavities observed are believed to be filled with hydrogen and stabilized by an internal pressure, that effectively counteracts the strong effect of surface energy at these small scales. The cavities may represent the origin of pinhole formation, and the atomic mechanisms behind the observed behavior are discussed and directions for enhancing the microstructural stability of Pd-based membranes are pointed out. © 2018 Elsevier B.V. Chemicals / CAS: hydrogen, 12385-13-6, 1333-74-0; methane, 74-82-8
Subject
Energy
Long-term stability
Microstructural characterisation
Pd membrane
STEM analysis
Grain boundaries
Steam reforming
High angle grain boundaries
Long term stability
Microstructural changes
Microstructural characterisation
Microstructural stability
Molecular recombination
Pd membrane
Stem analysis
Methane
Palladium
Energy transfer
Membrane permeability
Membrane structure
Phase transition
Surface tension
Behavior
Formation
Holes
Hydrogen
Increments
Leakage
Membranes
Permeability
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:5e3af4ee-4d29-4530-b267-2b9321877926
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.memsci.2018.06.008
TNO identifier
810203
ISSN
0376-7388
Source
Journal of Membrane Science, 563, 398-404
Document type
article