Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Isotope exchange kinetics in metal hydrides I : TPLUG model.

Technical Report ·
DOI:https://doi.org/10.2172/1030413· OSTI ID:1030413

A one-dimensional isobaric reactor model is used to simulate hydrogen isotope exchange processes taking place during flow through a powdered palladium bed. This simple model is designed to serve primarily as a platform for the initial development of detailed chemical mechanisms that can then be refined with the aid of more complex reactor descriptions. The one-dimensional model is based on the Sandia in-house code TPLUG, which solves a transient set of governing equations including an overall mass balance for the gas phase, material balances for all of the gas-phase and surface species, and an ideal gas equation of state. An energy equation can also be solved if thermodynamic properties for all of the species involved are known. The code is coupled with the Chemkin package to facilitate the incorporation of arbitrary multistep reaction mechanisms into the simulations. This capability is used here to test and optimize a basic mechanism describing the surface chemistry at or near the interface between the gas phase and a palladium particle. The mechanism includes reversible dissociative adsorptions of the three gas-phase species on the particle surface as well as atomic migrations between the surface and the bulk. The migration steps are more general than those used previously in that they do not require simultaneous movement of two atoms in opposite directions; this makes possible the creation and destruction of bulk vacancies and thus allows the model to account for variations in the bulk stoichiometry with isotopic composition. The optimization code APPSPACK is used to adjust the mass-action rate constants so as to achieve the best possible fit to a given set of experimental data, subject to a set of rigorous thermodynamic constraints. When data for nearly isothermal and isobaric deuterium-to-hydrogen (D {yields} H) and hydrogen-to-deuterium (H {yields} D) exchanges are fitted simultaneously, results for the former are excellent, while those for the latter show pronounced deviations at long times. These discrepancies can be overcome by postulating the presence of a surface poison such as carbon monoxide, but this explanation is highly speculative. When the method is applied to D {yields} H exchanges intentionally poisoned by known amounts of CO, the fitting results are noticeably degraded from those for the nominally CO-free system but are still tolerable. When TPLUG is used to simulate a blowdown-type experiment, which is characterized by large and rapid changes in both pressure and temperature, discrepancies are even more apparent. Thus, it can be concluded that the best use of TPLUG is not in simulating realistic exchange scenarios, but in extracting preliminary estimates for the kinetic parameters from experiments in which variations in temperature and pressure are intentionally minimized.

Research Organization:
Sandia National Laboratories
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
DOE Contract Number:
AC04-94AL85000
OSTI ID:
1030413
Report Number(s):
SAND2011-3243
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

Similar Records

Studies of isotopic exchange between gaseous hydrogen and palladium hydride powder
Journal Article · Mon Nov 30 23:00:00 EST 1987 · J. Catal.; (United States) · OSTI ID:5181960

CATALYTIC EXCHANGE OF n-HEXANE AND DEUTERIUM AND SOME ALLIED REACTIONS ON FILMS OF PALLADIUM AND RHODIUM
Journal Article · Sun Oct 01 00:00:00 EDT 1961 · Transactions of the Faraday Society (England) Superseded by J. Chem. Soc., Faraday Trans., I and II · OSTI ID:4833718

Reaction probability for exchange of hydrogen isotopes on palladium
Journal Article · Fri Feb 14 23:00:00 EST 1992 · Physical Review, B: Condensed Matter; (United States) · OSTI ID:5005002