Return To Main Page
Contact Us

Why is Ammonia superior in transport and storage?

Why would anyone consider using anhydrous ammonia rather than hydrogen?

Hydrogen, after all, contains more LHV (lower heating value) energy than ammonia (51,500 BTU/lb. vs 7,987 BTU/lb. or 119.93 kJ/g vs 18.577 kJ/g) on a weight basis.

However, on a volume basis ammonia is a much better hydrogen carrier than even liquefied hydrogen. The energy density of liquefied hydrogen is 8,491 kJ/liter compared to ammonia's 11,308 kJ/liter.

Although ammonia contains 17.65% of hydrogen by weight, the fact that there are 3 hydrogen atoms attached to a single nitrogen atom allows ammonia to contain about 48% more hydrogen by volume than even liquefied hydrogen.

That is to say, a cubic meter of liquid hydrogen contains 71 kg of hydrogen compared with 105 kg for liquid anhydrous ammonia.

Hydrogen's physical properties make it very difficult to handle. Because it is such a low density gas, very high pressures must be used to transport compressed hydrogen gas and this results in very low energy densities:

·         48,900 Btu/ft3 gas @ 3,000 psig & 60 ºF

·         121,000 Btu/ft3 gas @ 10,000 psig & 60 ºF

in metric, this is:

·         1,825 kJ/liter gas @ 200 barg & 15 ºC

·         4,500 kJ/liter gas @ 690 barg & 15 ºC

The low energy density of compressed hydrogen gas makes storage and transport very expensive.

  1. Transporting compressed hydrogen gas any significant distance by truck can consume more energy in diesel fuel than what is contained in hydrogen.
  2. Liquefied hydrogen is obviously more energy dense than compressed hydrogen gas but a significant amount of energy must be expended to liquefy hydrogen and keep it refrigerated because its boiling point is –423 ºF (–253 ºC).
  3. Liquefaction requires about 30% of the energy content of liquid hydrogen while compression to 800 bar requires about 10-15% of energy carried by the hydrogen.
  4. Hydrogen's molecules are very small and difficult to contain. Hydrogen will slowly leak out from hoses and its rate of leakage is much higher than larger molecule gases like ammonia and propane.
  5. Hydrogen also causes embrittlement in metals which requires periodic replacement of metallic tubing, valves, and tanks.
  6. Hydrogen is typically transported as a compressed gas and a 40 ton truck that can carry 26 tons of gasoline can only carry about 400 kg (0.4 tonnes) of compressed hydrogen due to the weight of the high pressure hydrogen tanks.

Ammonia, in comparison, stores and handles very much like LPG. Its boiling point is -33.35 °C (-28.03 °F). Propane, the main constituent of LPG, has a boiling point of -42.07 °C (-43.73 °F). On a hot day, a tank of NH3 at 50°C (122°F) will have a pressure of 2032 kPa (295 psi) compared with propane at 1729 kPa (251 psi) so it is important to keep these fuels out of the sun.

The design pressure of both anhydrous ammonia and propane tanks (with a corrosion allowance) is 250 psi which corresponds to a temperature of 44°C (111°F) for ammonia and 47°C (116°F) for propane. If these tanks were designed to the 312 psi (propane tank without a corrosion allowance), that corresponds to a temperature of 57°C (135°F) for ammonia and 60°C (140°F) for propane.

As for fuel properties, let's compare some relevant fuels:

Property

Ammonia

Hydrogen

Propane

CNG / Methane

Ethanol

Gasoline

Diesel

Energy Density LHV (BTU/gal)

40,571

30,459 @ -423°F

84,500

19,800 @ 2400 psi

 

116,090

~129,050

Energy Density LHV (MJ/liter)

11.2

8.4

 

23.3

21.1

29.8

35.8

Minimum Ignition Energy (mJ)

680

0.011 - 0.017

 

0.28 - 0.3

n/a

0.8

n/a

Octane Number

130+

130+

104

105 - 122

 

87 - 93

N/A

Auto Ignition Temperature (°C)

630

500

 

580

363

246 - 280

210

Flash Point (°C)

11

-253

 

-188

13 - 17

<-40

>62

Latent heat of vaporization (BTU/gal)

3356

N/A

775

N/A

 

~900

~710

Boiling Point (°C)

-33

-253

 

-162

78

126

287

Critical Temperature (°C)

132

-240

 

-83

--

--

--

Using anhydrous ammonia as an engine fuel is not a blue-sky concept. There are already three companies in the business of building NH3-fueled engines or NH3 engine conversions: Hydrogen Engine CenterHydrofuel Inc., and NH3CAR.

For more information, please visit the following links:

http://www.nhthree.com/

Ammonia Fuel Association

Iowa Energy Center's Ammonia Site

Raso Enterprises' Ammonia Fuel Forum

Potential Roles of Ammonia in a Hydrogen Economy

The Ammonia Economy

Ammonia: Key to US Energy Independence

AIR LIQUIDE's Gas Encyclopedia - Ammonia

R.M. Technologies Technical Information

 

Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
Spokane, Washington. 99212
www.exactrix.com

509 995 1879 cell, Pacific.
exactrix@exactrix.com