Why in the news?
- Scientists have developed a method to make ammonia-powered SOFCs more reliable and efficient by integrating a plasma reactor with the fuel cell, addressing challenges in using ammonia directly as a fuel for clean energy.
Ammonia-Powered Solid Oxide Fuel Cells (SOFCs)
- What are SOFCs?: They are electrochemical devices that convert chemical energy of fuel directly into electricity.
- Features:
- Operate at high temperatures of the range 600–1000°C.
- Use a solid ceramic electrolyte (usually yttria-stabilised zirconia).
- Can run on hydrogen, natural gas, syngas, or ammonia.
- Plasma Assisted Conversion:
- Plasma reactor breaks ammonia (NH₃) into hydrogen (H₂) and nitrogen (N₂) before reaching the fuel cell – Enhancing fuel quality and reducing poisoning effects on electrodes.
- Achieved 60% increase in power output at 800°C.
- The plasma process operates efficiently at room temperature and can use waste heat recycling.
- Ammonia as Fuel:
- Hydrogen Carrier: Ammonia (NH₃) contains ~17.6% hydrogen by weight.
- Carbon-Free: When decomposed, releases only nitrogen and hydrogen (no CO₂).
- Storage Advantage: Easier and cheaper to liquefy and transport than pure hydrogen.
- Global Supply Chains: Already mass-produced for fertilizers; existing infrastructure can be adapted.
- Significance:
- Clean Energy Transition: Supports green hydrogen economy by using ammonia as a hydrogen carrier.
- Climate Change Mitigation: Reduces reliance on fossil fuels, lowers carbon emissions.
- Strategic Importance for India:
- Aligns with the National Green Hydrogen Mission (2023).
- Potential use in shipping, power generation, and heavy industries.
- Can complement India’s energy security and decarbonisation goals.
- Challenges:
- High Operating Temperature causing material degradation and cost issues.
- NOx Emissions if not carefully controlled.
- Need for Green Ammonia: Current ammonia production is fossil-fuel heavy (Haber-Bosch process).