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International Clean Energy System Using Hydrogen Conversion (WE-NET). subtask 4. Development of hydrogen production technology; Suiso riyo kokusai clean energy system gijutsu (WE-NET). subtask 4. Suiso seizo gijutsu no kaihatsu

Abstract

This paper describes development of hydrogen production technology as a part of the WE-NET project. For the solid polymer water electrolysis method higher in efficiency and lower in cost than the previous methods, 5 companies have developed element technologies for improving electrolysis cells and synthesis technologies of hot solid polymer electrolyte based on each proper catalyst electrode production method. In fiscal 1996, the initial study on large-scale systems by middle laboratory cells was made as well as improvement of electrolysis performance by small laboratory cells and endurance tests. Among the previous methods such as a hot press method (bonding of an ion exchange membrane to an electrode), an electroless plating method (preparation of porous surface onto a membrane electrode assembly), a zero gap method (preparation of high-efficiency high-current density cells), and a sintered porous electrode method (carrying of the mixture of catalytic powder and ion exchange resin-dissipated solution onto sintered metallic porous electrode surface), the former two methods were adopted for development of bench-scale cells as effective promising methods. 192 refs., 183 figs., 108 tabs.
Publication Date:
Mar 01, 1997
Product Type:
Technical Report
Report Number:
NEDO-WE-NET-964
Reference Number:
SCA: 080101; 080400; 080900; PA: JP-97:0B0227; EDB-98:041939; NTS-98:004995; SN: 98001934094
Resource Relation:
Other Information: PBD: Mar 1997
Subject:
08 HYDROGEN FUEL; ENERGY SYSTEMS; GLOBAL ASPECTS; POLLUTION ABATEMENT; ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY; HYDROGEN; HYDROGEN-BASED ECONOMY; HYDROGEN PRODUCTION; WATER; ELECTROLYSIS; SOLID ELECTROLYTES; POLYMERS; ELECTROCATALYSTS; ELECTROLYTIC CELLS; ION EXCHANGE MATERIALS; MEMBRANES; HOT PRESSING; CHEMICAL COATING; ELECTRODES; POROUS MATERIALS; SINTERED MATERIALS
OSTI ID:
604008
Research Organizations:
New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization, Tokyo (Japan)
Country of Origin:
Japan
Language:
Japanese
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ON: DE98745408; TRN: JN97B0227
Availability:
OSTI as DE98745408
Submitting Site:
NEDO
Size:
299 p.
Announcement Date:
May 28, 1998

Citation Formats

None. International Clean Energy System Using Hydrogen Conversion (WE-NET). subtask 4. Development of hydrogen production technology; Suiso riyo kokusai clean energy system gijutsu (WE-NET). subtask 4. Suiso seizo gijutsu no kaihatsu. Japan: N. p., 1997. Web.
None. International Clean Energy System Using Hydrogen Conversion (WE-NET). subtask 4. Development of hydrogen production technology; Suiso riyo kokusai clean energy system gijutsu (WE-NET). subtask 4. Suiso seizo gijutsu no kaihatsu. Japan.
None. 1997. "International Clean Energy System Using Hydrogen Conversion (WE-NET). subtask 4. Development of hydrogen production technology; Suiso riyo kokusai clean energy system gijutsu (WE-NET). subtask 4. Suiso seizo gijutsu no kaihatsu." Japan.
@misc{etde_604008,
title = {International Clean Energy System Using Hydrogen Conversion (WE-NET). subtask 4. Development of hydrogen production technology; Suiso riyo kokusai clean energy system gijutsu (WE-NET). subtask 4. Suiso seizo gijutsu no kaihatsu}
author = {None}
abstractNote = {This paper describes development of hydrogen production technology as a part of the WE-NET project. For the solid polymer water electrolysis method higher in efficiency and lower in cost than the previous methods, 5 companies have developed element technologies for improving electrolysis cells and synthesis technologies of hot solid polymer electrolyte based on each proper catalyst electrode production method. In fiscal 1996, the initial study on large-scale systems by middle laboratory cells was made as well as improvement of electrolysis performance by small laboratory cells and endurance tests. Among the previous methods such as a hot press method (bonding of an ion exchange membrane to an electrode), an electroless plating method (preparation of porous surface onto a membrane electrode assembly), a zero gap method (preparation of high-efficiency high-current density cells), and a sintered porous electrode method (carrying of the mixture of catalytic powder and ion exchange resin-dissipated solution onto sintered metallic porous electrode surface), the former two methods were adopted for development of bench-scale cells as effective promising methods. 192 refs., 183 figs., 108 tabs.}
place = {Japan}
year = {1997}
month = {Mar}
}