For chemical reactions, the iron oxide cycle (Fe3O4/FeO) is the original two-step thermochemical cycle proposed for use for hydrogen production.[1] It is based on the reduction and subsequent oxidation of iron ions, particularly the reduction and oxidation between Fe3+ and Fe2+. The ferrites, or iron oxide, begins in the form of a spinel and depending on the reaction conditions, dopant metals and support material forms either Wüstites or different spinels.

Simplified diagram of the iron oxide cycle

Process description

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The thermochemical two-step water splitting process uses two redox steps. The steps of solar hydrogen production by iron based two-step cycle are:

 

Where M can by any number of metals, often Fe itself, Co, Ni, Mn, Zn or mixtures thereof.

The endothermic reduction step (1) is carried out at high temperatures greater than 1400 °C, though the "Hercynite cycle" is capable of temperatures as low as 1200 °C. The oxidative water splitting step (2) occurs at a lower ~1000 °C temperature which produces the original ferrite material in addition to hydrogen gas. The temperature level is realized by using geothermal heat from magma[2] or a solar power tower and a set of heliostats to collect the solar thermal energy.

Hercynite cycle

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Like the traditional iron oxide cycle, the hercynite is based on the oxidation and reduction of iron atoms. However unlike the traditional cycle, the ferrite material reacts with a second metal oxide, aluminum oxide, rather than simply decomposing. The reactions take place via the following two reactions:

 

The reduction step of the hercynite reaction takes place at temperature ~ 200 °C lower than the traditional water splitting cycle (1200 °C).[3] This leads to lower radiation losses, which scale as temperature to the fourth power.

Advantages and disadvantages

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The advantages of the ferrite cycles are: they have lower reduction temperatures than other 2-step systems, no metallic gasses are produced, high specific H2 production capacity, non-toxicity of the elements used and abundance of the constituent elements.

The disadvantages of the ferrite cycles are: similar reduction and melting temperature of the spinels (except for the hercynite cycle as aluminates have very high melting temperatures), and slow rates of the oxidation, or water splitting, reaction.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Project PD10" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-02-05. Retrieved 2008-12-19.
  2. ^ Sentech 2008-Analysis of geothermally produced hydrogen on the big island of Hawaii
  3. ^ Sheffe, Jonathan; Jianhua Li; Alan W. Weimer (2010). "A spinel ferrite/hercynite water-splitting redox cycle". International Journal of Hydrogen Energy. 35 (8): 3333–3340. doi:10.1016/j.ijhydene.2010.01.140.
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