Replacing coal and oil with natural gas reduces greenhouse gas emissions without weakening economic development. Sorption enhanced steam methane reforming (SESMR) is an emerging process for an affordable transition towards cleaner energy systems, as it exploits natural gas coupled with in-situ CO2 capture to produce hydrogen. SESMR is performed on a steam reforming catalyst and a sorbent (cyclically regenerated by calcination) or, alternatively and more efficiently, on bi-functional Combined Sorbent-Catalyst Materials (CSCM). A double fluidized bed (reformer and oxyfuel combustor for calcination) with circulation of particulate material is anticipated for continuous SESMR at commercial scale. In this work, a Ni-CaO-mayenite CSCM was investigated in multicycle experimental tests under mild (pure N-2, 850 degrees C) and severe (pure CO2, 925 degrees C) regeneration conditions, in thermogravimetric analysis for CO2-capture/regeneration and in an automated packed bed test rig for SESMR/calcination: the evolution of Ni and CaO functionalities as functions of cycle number was highlighted, also with the aid of scanning electron microscopy. Moreover, experimental results obtained with the hybrid material, collected under mild regeneration conditions, were used to simulate both CO2 sorption in TGA and packed bed SESMR multicycle tests: a Particle Grain Model (PGM) and an Axial Dispersion Plug Flow Reactor (ADPFR) model were integrated numerically, respectively. The same parameter values needed to characterize the material behaviour allowed a good fitting of both types of multicycle tests, thus demonstrating the possibility to use CO2-capture TGA data as a predictive tool for the CSCM performance in SESMR, provided that the catalytic activity is preserved.

Multicycle sorption enhanced steam methane reforming with different sorbent regeneration conditions

Di Giuliano A.;Foscolo P. U.;Gallucci K.
2018-01-01

Abstract

Replacing coal and oil with natural gas reduces greenhouse gas emissions without weakening economic development. Sorption enhanced steam methane reforming (SESMR) is an emerging process for an affordable transition towards cleaner energy systems, as it exploits natural gas coupled with in-situ CO2 capture to produce hydrogen. SESMR is performed on a steam reforming catalyst and a sorbent (cyclically regenerated by calcination) or, alternatively and more efficiently, on bi-functional Combined Sorbent-Catalyst Materials (CSCM). A double fluidized bed (reformer and oxyfuel combustor for calcination) with circulation of particulate material is anticipated for continuous SESMR at commercial scale. In this work, a Ni-CaO-mayenite CSCM was investigated in multicycle experimental tests under mild (pure N-2, 850 degrees C) and severe (pure CO2, 925 degrees C) regeneration conditions, in thermogravimetric analysis for CO2-capture/regeneration and in an automated packed bed test rig for SESMR/calcination: the evolution of Ni and CaO functionalities as functions of cycle number was highlighted, also with the aid of scanning electron microscopy. Moreover, experimental results obtained with the hybrid material, collected under mild regeneration conditions, were used to simulate both CO2 sorption in TGA and packed bed SESMR multicycle tests: a Particle Grain Model (PGM) and an Axial Dispersion Plug Flow Reactor (ADPFR) model were integrated numerically, respectively. The same parameter values needed to characterize the material behaviour allowed a good fitting of both types of multicycle tests, thus demonstrating the possibility to use CO2-capture TGA data as a predictive tool for the CSCM performance in SESMR, provided that the catalytic activity is preserved.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11697/135529
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