Do you think metal particles could be the clean fuel of the future?
Can you imagine a future where your car is fueled by iron powder instead of gasoline?
Metal powders, produced using clean primary energy sources, could
provide a more viable long-term replacement for fossil fuels than other
widely discussed alternatives, such as hydrogen, biofuels or batteries,
according to a study in the Dec. 15 issue of the journal Applied Energy.
"Technologies to generate clean electricity -- primarily solar and
wind power -- are being developed rapidly; but we can't use that
electricity for many of the things that oil and gas are used for today,
such as transportation and global energy trade," notes McGill University
professor Jeffrey Bergthorson, lead author of the new study.
"Biofuels can be part of the solution, but won't be able to satisfy
all the demand; hydrogen requires big, heavy fuel tanks and is
explosive, and batteries are too bulky and don't store enough energy for
many applications," says Bergthorson, a mechanical engineering
professor and Associate Director of the Trottier Institute for
Sustainability in Engineering and Design at McGill. "Using metal powders
as recyclable fuels that store clean primary energy for later use is a
very promising alternative solution."
The Applied Energy paper, co-authored by Bergthorson with
five other McGill researchers and a European Space Agency scientist in
the Netherlands, lays out a novel concept for using tiny metal particles
-- similar in size to fine flour or icing sugar -- to power
external-combustion engines.
Unlike the internal-combustion engines used in gasoline-powered cars,
external-combustion engines use heat from an outside source to drive an
engine. External-combustion engines, modern versions of the coal-fired
steam locomotives that drove the industrial era, are widely used to
generate power from nuclear, coal or biomass fuels in power stations.
The idea of burning metal powders is nothing new -- they've been used
for centuries in fireworks, for instance. Since the mid-20th century,
they've also been used in rocket propellants, such as the space
shuttle's solid-fuel booster rockets. But relatively little research has
been done in recent decades on the properties of metal flames, and the
potential for metal powders to be used as a recyclable fuel in a wide
range of applications has been largely overlooked by scientists.
The idea put forward by the McGill team takes advantage of an
important property of metal powders: when burned, they react with air to
form stable, nontoxic solid-oxide products that can be collected
relatively easily for recycling -- unlike the CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuels that escape into the atmosphere.
Using a custom-built burner, the McGill researchers demonstrated that
a flame can be stabilized in a flow of tiny metal particles suspended
in air. Flames from metal powders "appear quite similar" to those
produced by burning hydrocarbon fuels, the researchers write. "The
energy and power densities of the proposed metal-fueled heat engines are
predicted to be close to current fossil-fueled internal combustion
engines, making them an attractive technology for a future low-carbon
society."
Iron could be the primary candidate for this purpose, according to
the study. Millions of tons of iron powders are already produced
annually for the metallurgy, chemical and electronic industries. And
iron is readily recyclable with well-established technologies, and some
novel techniques can avoid the carbon dioxide emissions associated with
traditional iron production using coal.
While laboratory work at McGill and elsewhere has shown that the use
of metal fuels with heat engines is technically feasible, no one has yet
demonstrated the idea in practice. The next step toward turning the lab
findings into usable technology, therefore, will be "to build a
prototype burner and couple it to a heat engine," Bergthorson says.
"Developing metal recycling processes that don't involve CO2 emissions is also critical."
Co-author David Jarvis, head of strategic and emerging technologies
at the European Space Agency, adds: "We are very interested in this
technology because it opens the door to new propulsion systems that can
be used in space and on earth.
The shift away from fossil fuels for
vehicle propulsion is a clear trend for the future. While not perfected
and commercialized today, the use of low-cost metallic fuels, like iron
powder, is a worthy alternative to petrol and diesel fuels. If we can
demonstrate, for the first time, an iron-fueled engine with almost zero
CO2 emissions, we believe this would then trigger even more innovation and cost reduction in the near future."
Research on metal combustion at McGill has been funded over the past
20 years by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of
Canada, the Canadian Department of National Defence, the U.S. Defence
Threat Reduction Agency, the Canadian Space Agency, the European Space
Agency, Martec Ltd. (Halifax, NS), and the Trottier Institute for
Sustainability in Engineering and Design.
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