Hydrogen generator and non-polluting inner combustion engine for driving vehicles
10830125 ยท 2020-11-10
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60K15/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02B43/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B47/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E60/36
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F02M27/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T10/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
C01B2203/0277
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F02M21/0227
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T90/40
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
C01B3/50
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
F02B43/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C01B3/50
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F02B47/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M21/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B60K15/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60K15/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A hydrogen generator for use with an inner combustion engine or other apparatus, even of a movable type, such as a home gas kitchen, said hydrogen generator comprises a system for separating hydrogen from ammonia, said system comprising a NH.sub.3 tank, an ammonia sucking pump, and a cracking oven containing a catalyst, an electric resistance and a H.sub.2/N.sub.2 separating centrifuge and including a suction device comprising a filter followed by a bottle for providing a feeding volume necessary for the produced hydrogen to compensate for user system requirement variations.
Claims
1. A vehicle comprising an internal combustion engine and a hydrogen generator arranged on-board said vehicle for providing hydrogen as a fuel to said internal combustion engine, said hydrogen generator comprising a system for separating hydrogen from ammonia, said system comprising: an ammonia tank containing ammonia, an ammonia sucking pump for pumping ammonia from said ammonia tank, a cracking oven arranged for receiving ammonia from said ammonia sucking pump, a catalyst arranged inside said cracking oven, an electric resistance arranged inside said cracking oven, an H.sub.2/N.sub.2 separating centrifuge connected to said cracking oven and comprising an N.sub.2 exhaust duct, for exhausting into the environment nitrogen separated from ammonia, and an H.sub.2 feeding duct, a suction device connected to said H.sub.2/N.sub.2 separating centrifuge and arranged for feeding generated hydrogen into said H.sub.2 feeding duct, a filter arranged on said H.sub.2 feeding duct, and a bottle arranged downstream of said filter for storing said generated hydrogen and for providing a feeding volume necessary for said generated hydrogen produced from said hydrogen generator to compensate for system requirement variations, said internal combustion engine comprising at least one cylinder operating by conventional suction and exhausting engine strokes, said H.sub.2 feeding duct being connected to said at least one cylinder for feeding said generated hydrogen into said at least one cylinder, said vehicle further comprising an oxygen supply connected to said at least one cylinder for supplying oxygen to said at least one cylinder, said vehicle further comprising a water metering/atomizer device connected to said at least one cylinder for supplying atomized water to said at least one cylinder.
2. The vehicle according to claim 1, wherein said ammonia is a commercial liquid ammonia, or a water solution thereof at an environment temperature and pressure, ammonia vapors being processed in an electric oven at a temperature of 600 C., in presence of Fe as said catalyst, according to the reaction 2NH.sub.3.Math.N.sub.2+3H.sub.2 and then exhausting non-used nitrogen into the environmental atmosphere.
3. The vehicle according to claim 1, wherein said ceramics filter is permeable to hydrogen molecules and impermeable to nitrogen molecules.
4. The vehicle according to claim 1 wherein said internal combustion engine is a single-cylinder or multiple-cylinder internal combustion engine operating by conventional suction and exhausting engine strokes, wherein said internal combustion engine comprises a compression stroke divided into three parts, in the first part of which a comburent oxygen containing substance is introduced, in the second part of which hydrogen produced by said hydrogen generator and atomized water as a thermal moderating agent are introduced, and in the third part of which is performed, with an advance with respect to an engine top dead center, an ignition of the fuel mixture, and then an expansion of the vapor charge produced by the combustion being started and finally a vapor exhausting being performed.
5. The vehicle according to claim 4, wherein the hydrogen and oxygen mixture compressed in said engine cylinder or cylinders is ignited by an electric spark and burns while producing a mechanical work.
6. The vehicle according to claim 4, wherein said cylinder has an inner temperature controlled and modified by injecting, at preselected times of the expansion stroke of the water steam produced by a combustion, by a calculated and programmed injection of atomized water amounts for mating the temperature of the thermodynamic cycle to the designed temperatures.
7. The vehicle according to claim 1, wherein said water metering/atomizer device comprises two water atomizer and injector devices adapted to inject atomized water respectively at opposed zones of said cylinder, and two temperature probes arranged respectively at said opposed zones.
8. The vehicle according to claim 1, further comprising a system for separating oxygen from air for supplying said oxygen supply to said cylinder, said system for separating oxygen from air comprising a centrifuge, a compressor, a filter, and an oxygen accumulating and compensating bottle connected to said cylinder.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Further characteristics and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following disclosure of a preferred, though not exclusive, embodiment of the invention which is illustrated, by way of an indicative but not limitative example, in the accompanying drawings, where:
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(8) With reference to the number references of the above mentioned figures, the hydrogen generator, according to the present invention, comprises a system for separating hydrogen from ammonia, said system including a NH.sub.3 tank a, a NH.sub.3 suction pump a and a cracking oven a.
(9) The cracking oven a contains the catalyst b and an electric resistance c.
(10) A H.sub.2/N.sub.2 separating centrifuge d is built-in in the oven a and comprises a suction device d including a preferably ceramics filter c followed by a small hydrogen bottle f for providing the hydrogen amount necessary for compensating for possible user system variations.
(11) From the separating centrifuge d two ducts extend, one of which is provided for discharging into the environment the ammonia nitrogen (which is not used) and the other of which is provided for feeding the generated hydrogen to its user system, indicated by way of an example by a home gas kitchen flame g, as a further possible illustrative application.
(12) Thus, the thermal energy of the above gas may be used, in an absolutely safe manner, for different applications and movable systems, since it is free of poisonous or toxic polluting substances, and of explosion dangers.
(13) The ceramics filter e is transparent to the hydrogen molecules and opaque to the nitrogen molecules.
(14) The above system may be advantageously used in vehicles such as cars, as a thermal energy feeding system providing thermal energy to a thermodynamic operating cycle based on a combustion temperature control, as it will be disclosed hereinafter.
(15) In existing inner combustion engines, in order to determine the engine displacement, and accordingly the maximum power supplied thereby, the air amount to be sucked by its cylinder (or cylinder assembly) is at first evaluated.
(16) Then, from the mentioned sucked air amount, the fuel amount to be fed to the cylinder to provide a full combustion is determined.
(17) This is achieved by calculating the combustible and comburent element stechiometric ratio, with a necessary safety tolerance.
(18) In this connection it should be pointed out that oxygen (that is that air part actually having the comburent gas function) represents about by weight of the air supplied amount, the remaining part consisting of non-combustible nitrogen gas, generating an undesired very high noxious oxide amount.
(19) It should be also pointed out that in the conventionally used combustible or fuel material, consisting in most cases of a hydrocarbon, any hydrogen molecule is associated with several carbon atoms participating in the combustion and producing a part of the useful work, as well as oxide and anhydride polluting substances.
(20) If a combustion occurs, as in the present invention, between a nearly pure hydrogen and oxygen, then no polluting substances will be generated, but, as is known, a very high combustion temperature, much higher than that compatible with the mechanical strength of the materials used for making the engine, will be obtained.
(21) This drawback, also affecting prior reciprocating piston engines, will be worsened if rotary inner combustion engines are adopted on a large scale, as it will be discussed hereinafter, and as the case would be if the use of hydrogen will spread in a near future.
(22) The invention provides to eliminate part of the fuel generated heat, by strongly cooling the engine head.
(23) Up to now, this loss has been commonly accepted both by the engine designers and users, who have considered it as a tribute to be paid for using the residual heat.
(24) However, the question should be asked if the above sacrifice is really inevitable, when considering, on one side, its economical importance and, on the other side, the fact that the above loss would be further aggravated in using advanced engines, improved with respect to prior reciprocating piston engines, which are conceptually obsolete.
(25) Actually, in prior engines, the above loss exceeds, because of cooling and radiating, a rate of 25% of the heat supplied by the fuel, and in a higher power concentration engine, such as a rotary one, it could even be 35% or more, thereby the development of such engines would become questionable, since the yield of a prior endothermic engine cannot exceed 35% of the heat amount potentially contained in the hydrocarbons.
(26) In order to overcome the above mentioned loss, it would be sufficient to differently design the engine, by the inventive novel concept of controlling its cycle maximum temperature according to requirements, that is by using as the engine main designing parameters, instead of the sucked comburent air amount, the heat amount potentially contained in the fuel and by moderating the cycle maximum temperature, by injecting into the cylinder a liquid water amount adapted to transform into a pressure the generated heat excess above that which could be borne by the engine materials, that is by introducing in the engine cylinder an atomized water amount so calculated as to transform into steam by the hydrogen combustion generated heat.
(27) Thus, the average pressure of the cycle and accordingly also the work generated by the piston or pistons will be greatly enhanced.
(28) Thus, by properly designing the injected water amount, the combustion chamber maximum temperature will be held within the desired values and the expansion of the water steam will cool it to the condensing and exhausting temperature.
(29) If the exhausting cycle temperature is still considered too high (thereby reducing the thermal hopping of the cycle and accordingly its thermodynamic yield), then it would be possible to perform a second atomized water injection during the end steam expansion stroke, upon controlling its temperature.
(30) Thus, by using two temperature probes, one at the combustion chamber and the other near the exhausting system, and by associating therewith two fully automatized atomized water injector/metering devices, it will be possible to provide a thermodynamic cycle substantially corresponding to that calculated in the designing job, as well as an efficiency always near to the maximum one.
(31) To the above it should be added that the use of water to moderate the cycle temperature would allow to held within low values the total engine displacement required and accordingly the engine weight and size, which would be very important for an average or low pressure hydrogen engine since the potential heat contents of hydrogen at atmospheric pressure is just 2.48 Kcal/liter.
(32) Thus, from the above it should be apparent that an adoption of the proposed operating cycle allows to use all the work provided by the combustible material without using any dedicated system for cooling the engine heads which, because of its complexity and delicate structure, is frequently a source of operating failures in extreme climates or use conditions of the vehicle.
(33) For applying to an inner combustion engine the hydrogen generator shown in
(34) However, the above additional apparatus would not be necessary if the combustion temperature control could prevent the achievement of cylinder temperatures above which nitrogen oxides are formed.
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(37) In
(38) It has been previously pointed out that an ideal engine for using a hydrogen fuel is not a reciprocating piston inner combustion engine.
(39) However, the above does not mean that a reciprocating piston engine could not be used with hydrogen (as it is used indeed with small modifications to the operation with gaseous hydrocarbons), but merely means that a reciprocating piston engine is not the most suitable one to provide from a hydrogen fuel all the advantages which could be achieved by other mechanisms.
(40) In fact, the high number of operating cycles a rotary type of engine can afford would greatly aid the achievement of a high power with a reduced displacement, size and weight.
(41) The same considerations are also true for the very high flame temperature, for simplifying the respective compared mechanisms and for the very high efficiency of the inner heat exchanges, provided that, if the inevitable limitations due to the old engine adaptation to a hydrogen feeding and its reduced performance are accepted, then most of the existing vehicles could be adapted to the novel use, in particular when it is possible, as it is likely at least for most cases, to fit the use of the specific reciprocating piston engine type to an alternative use of two different fuels, such as a gaseous hydrocarbon and hydrogen, by switching from one to the other depending on requirements.
(42) Obviously, the above should be specifically studied case by case.
(43) Anyhow, in the subject hydrogen vehicle, the only fluid to be periodically fed is ammonia, and the only exhausting operation to the atmosphere is that of a nitrogen amount, without polluting components.
(44) Lastly, it would be suitable to verify the efficiency of ammonia as a heat (and accordingly energy) carrier, both with respect to the vehicle range between two refueling operations, and for establishing the frequency of the refueling points on the involved area.
(45) In this connection it should be pointed out that ammonia may be distributed in different forms, that is liquefied in bottles at a pressure of 8 atm, as well as dissolved in water, since at an environment pressure and at a temperature of 15 C. it can be water dissolved in an amount of 800 liters of ammonia per liter of water (the weight of the gaseous ammonia at 0 C. and 76 mm/hg is 0.771 kg/liter and the weight of liquid ammonia is 0.614 kg/liter.
(46) As to the thermal energy provided by ammonia compared with the thermal energy provided by gasoline, the following data should be considered: for each burnt gasoline kg are achieved 12.2 kWh, for each hydrogen kg are achieved 34.7 kWh and since the ammonia gram molecule contains 0.176 H.sub.2, 1 kg ammonia will contain 3*1000/17=176.5 g H.sub.2 which, upon burning, provide 6.12 kWh, that is about a half of the kWh provided by gasoline per conveyed weight unit.
(47) The weight increase e related to the on board conveyed liquid as a reserve fuel, compared with gasoline, at a same power contents, would be accordingly easily allowable, since anyhow it is much lower than that of the high pressure bottles for transporting pressurized hydrogen, in gaseous form, or that of the cryogenic vessels for transporting it in a liquid form, or in a hydride form, and the related adjusting and delivery system.
(48) From a safety standpoint, on the other hand, a transport of ammonia under any forms would be absolutely preferable to that of hydrogen, in particular when considering the frequency of road accidents in the large town traffic.
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(50) With the exception of the inlet and outlet strokes, which are nearly equal to those which are conventional for all the inner combustion engines, the compression stroke is divided into three parts, in the first of which is introduced the comburent material which, as shown, may be air or oxygen, and in the second of which is injected hydrogen and atomized water as a thermal moderating agent, and in the third of which is performed the igniting of the mixture with a certain advancing with respect to the top dead center.
(51) Then, the combustion steam expansion starts and at last the steam will be exhausted into the steam recovery vessel, not shown in
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(54) It has been found that the invention fully achieves the intended aim and objects.
(55) In practicing the invention, the materials used, as well as the contingent size and shapes can be any, according to requirements.