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High-temperature electrolysis for reducing H2O (and CO2) to H2 (and CO) converts concentrated solar energy into fuels and chemical feedstock. We invented an integrated reactor concept comprising a solar cavity receiver for reactant heating, a solid oxide electrolyzer (SOE) stack for water electrolysis, and concentrated photovoltaic (PV) cells for the SOE stack’s electricity demand. A numerical model compared thermoneutral and endo/exothermal operation of the SOE stack. Without heat recovery, we predicted a maximum solar-to-hydrogen (STH) efficiency of 19.85% (assuming 20% PV efficiency and 20% heat losses in the solar cavity receiver) and preferentially endothermal operation. Heat recovery further improved the performance. We demonstrated a 2.5 kW (17% electrical and 83% thermal input) reactor, incorporating a commercial 16-cell Ni/YSZ/LSM SOE stack into a double-helical solar cavity receiver, with 3.33% STH efficiency (assuming 20% PV efficiency). The experimentally supported analysis indicates that endothermal operation increases the performance and predicts STH efficiencies encouraging intensified research and technology development.
Christophe Ballif, Alejandro Pena Bello, Noémie Alice Yvonne Ségolène Jeannin, Jérémy Dumoulin
Gloria Serra Coch, Pablo Francisco Martinez Alcaraz