1. Introduction
Global energy systems are dominated by fossil fuels, which currently represent around 85% of the total energy supply, whereas they will represent 90% of the total supply by 2030. Oil is the main energy source (34%), followed by coal (28%). Almost two-thirds of the increase in the coal supply between 2000 and 2030 will come from Asia. According to future trends, natural gas will represent a quarter of the total energy supply in 2030, on account of an increase in electricity generation [
1]. Another environmental problem is oil consumption due to vehicles, which represents a considerable amount of evolved gases, contributing to the greenhouse effect. Apart from these factors, continuous changes in oil prices, as well as its questionable future availability, have contributed to the development of vehicles working with electric power or whose fuel is methanol or ethanol (or other natural sources) that can contribute to environmental protection, such as the use of vegetable oils to produce biodiesel, which is a perfect replacement for diesel as it presents many advantages such as biodegradability, higher lubrication efficiency and similar yields and efficiency in combustion engines, where it can be directly used if it complies with some quality standards [
2].
In that sense, many vegetable oils, including safflower, rapeseed, cardoon or waste cooking oil, among others, have been successfully used for biodiesel production, with suitable properties according to UNE-EN 14214 standard [
3] in most cases, except for its low oxidative stability, which can be easily improved by an antioxidant addition such as tert-Butylhydroquinone (TBHQ) [
4,
5,
6], butylated hydroxy anisole (BHA) [
4] or propyl gallate (PG) [
7]. Apart from that, genetically modified crops, with lower amounts of linoleic and linolenic acid (which cause a considerable decrease in oxidative stability), could be another interesting alternative to comply with the standard [
8]. In any case, many studies have been carried out to optimize the effectiveness of biodiesel production and performance in diesel engines to make this process as competitive as possible, with the subsequent sustainable development [
9]. This way, the role of biodiesel, especially when it comes to tribology [
10] or pollutant emissions and efficiency [
11], has been studied. Consequently, biodiesel production is going to play an important role in the short- and long-term, as observed in
Figure 1 for global biodiesel production in million liters. This way, biodiesel production will triple in 15 years, pointing out the global concern about the replacement of petrol-based fuels for other sustainable alternatives. This could be due to the fact that many governments or international agencies (for instance, the so-called Sustainable Development Goals, SDGs [
12]) are encouraging the use of these kinds of fuels in order to avoid environmental and sustainability problems.
As commented above, biodiesel presents many advantages compared to conventional fuels, such as higher biodegradability (it comes from natural sources such as vegetable oils, and the chemical process produces similar molecular structures which are easily processed by microorganisms), zero-net CO
2 emissions, high flash and combustion points, the possibility of a sustainable economic growth in developing areas (as many oilseed crops can be easily adapted to extreme climate conditions such as drought or heat), etc. Biodiesel is mainly obtained from vegetable oils through transesterification with methanol, and triglycerides react with this alcohol to obtain fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) and glycerol, as observed in
Figure 2. This global reaction takes place in three consecutive and reversible stages where one mol of triglyceride is converted to diglyceride, monoglyceride and glycerol, respectively, obtaining one mol of fatty acid methyl ester in each reaction. The use of catalysts (both homogeneous and heterogeneous [
14] or acid and alkaline [
15], which present their own advantages and challenges), for instance, sodium methylate, is required to make the process more efficient [
16,
17]. Once fatty acid methyl esters (that is, biodiesel) are obtained, the purification process usually requires glycerol removal through decantation and washing treatments if homogeneous catalysts are used. Finally, a drying stage takes place, and the final product is obtained (normally biodiesel with at least 96.5% FAME content).
In that sense, the latest trends in biodiesel production are devoted to innovative ways to improve the yield and efficiency of transesterification, mainly focused on machine-learning technology applied to biodiesel research [
18] or the use of new dispositions such as bionic flow-induced peristaltic reactors [
19].
As can be inferred from this figure, glycerol is obtained as a byproduct in transesterification, representing approximately 10% of biodiesel production. This process can present a high atom economy or efficiency depending on conversion and the use of byproducts [
20,
21]. Traditionally, glycerol was obtained through several processes such as soap making or fatty alcohol, fatty acid methyl ester and fatty acid production, through synthetic methods or other methods such as microbial fermentation [
22,
23]. A summary of the main properties of glycerol can be found in
Table 1.
Thus, glycerol is not toxic nor irritant, it is soluble in water and alcohols and stable at low pressure values and room temperature. Depending on the degree of purity of glycerol, it can be an interesting energy source (such as reforming or pyrolysis for energy [
24]) or the starting point for the synthesis of other products such as C3 compounds (such as acrolein, propanediols or carboxylic acids) obtained from routes such as hydrogenation, oxidation or esterification or activated carbons through pyrolysis [
21].
Considering the future trend about biodiesel production, it is not surprising that glycerol generation has considerably increased in recent years, which can imply an opportunity for its reuse in industrial processes. A feasible possibility is the use of glycerol as an energy source to obtain synthesis gas (a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide at different ratios) [
25]. This synthesis gas, if it is suitably treated, can produce fuel in an environmentally friendly process, as glycerol is obtained from chemical routes by using renewable raw materials [
26].
Glycerol steam reforming (GSR) is one of the most typical methods to produce hydrogen in industry, as it is efficient and profitable at an industrial level [
21,
27]. This technique does not require excessively high pressures and higher hydrogen percentages are produced at high temperatures. Steam reforming consists of the conversion of hydrocarbons to hydrogen or synthesis gas, through a treatment at high temperatures with an oxidizing agent and a catalyst. Thus, glycerol reacts with steam to produce H
2, CO
2 and CO, in a highly endothermal process (ΔH
0 = 123 kJ/mol) represented in Equation (1), which is a combination of glycerol decomposition (ΔH
0 = 251 kJ/mol, Equation (2)) and water–gas shift reaction (WGS, ΔH
0 = −41 kJ/mol, Equation (3)) [
28]:
Consequently, the H
2 and CO ratio depends on the reaction conditions, including the kind of catalyst used, as CO can be converted in the WGS reaction to produce carbon dioxide. Also, other secondary reactions can take place, such as methane generation through exothermal reactions like those included in Equations (4) and (5):
As a consequence, the presence of these secondary reactions explains the difficulty in reaching 100% H
2 production during glycerol steam reforming. To increase H
2 production, through GSR, a suitable catalyst selection should be carried out to promote the cleavage of C-C, O-H and C-H bonds in the oxygenated hydrocarbon reactant and facilitate the WGS to remove adsorbed CO [
28]. Other factors with a strong influence on glycerol steam reforming are the following:
Feed flow: Overfeeding could reduce the yield of conversion, whereas the contrary could imply a poor gas production. The optimum flow maximizes the energy efficiency of the process.
Temperature: This is one of the key factors, as it affects the yield of the process and gas composition. In general, high temperature values correspond to a higher gas production and higher H2 percentage in the outlet gas.
Steam to carbon (S/C) ratio: As it increases, the gas produced is richer in hydrogen, whereas the gas flow decreases.
Catalyst use: The use of catalysts (normally transition metals belonging to group VIIIB) is essential in this kind of process to obtain high conversion values. Also, the use of a support (such as Al
2O
3, ZrO
2, SiO
2 or TiO
2) can promote conversion, and the particle size can play an important role in favoring mass transfer and contact among reagents within the reactor. Also, the use of additives or promoters can improve the activity or service life by avoiding problems such as poisoning or carbon deposition [
29,
30].
Hydrogen production from renewable biomass has gained interest in recent years in the scientific community, international agencies and governments, promoting its implementation through international green chemistry policies [
31]. Thus, biomass and glycerol reforming has been studied through gasification to improve glycerol conversion to hydrogen depending on the temperature, pressure and steam to carbon ratio, obtaining favorable results at high temperatures and low pressures.
This study determined that the optimum condition to produce hydrogen was between 700 and 750 °C, at 0.1 MPa, concluding that glycerol and biomass steam reforming is feasible at practical operating temperatures, typical at an industrial level [
32]. Similar studies tested glycerol valorization obtained from biodiesel synthesis to obtain a gas rich in H
2 through a sequential process where the first step consisted of glycerol purification to reduce impurities and, afterward, it underwent steam reforming. The theoretical and experimental studies showed that the temperature and glycerol concentration had a considerable influence on the thermodynamics, with an optimum point at 700 °C and a carbon conversion to gas of around 95%, with a gas composition of 67% H
2, 22% CO
2, 11% CO and 1% CH
4 [
33]. Equally, hydrogen production through ethanol and glycerol steam reforming was carried out with Ir, Co and Ni catalysts supported on CeO
2, finding that the former (Ir/CeO
2) provided a full conversion of glycerol at 400 °C, whereas the total conversion for Co/CeO
2 and Ni/CeO
2 took place at 425 and 450 °C, respectively [
34]. Another study pointed out the role of promoters such as Mg, Zr, Ce or La in Ni-Al
2O
3 catalysts, increasing the hydrogen selectivity during the process and obtaining the full conversion of glycerol at 600 °C (at atmospheric pressure) and a space velocity of 2.5 h
−1. Ni, Ir and Co were effective for CeO
2, with a total conversion of glycerol and 90% selectivity for hydrogen at 550 °C [
35]. For additional hydrogen purification, membrane reactors can be used to increase the hydrogen percentage in the final gas, with Pd-Ag membranes being one of the most popular alternatives for this purpose [
23].
Thus, glycerol turns out to be a good candidate to be a renewable source for hydrogen production. Its conversion to hydrogen (depending on the use of purification technologies such as membrane reactors or pressure swing adsorption [
36,
37]) or synthesis gas can be reached through reforming processes such as steam reforming (SO), partial oxidation or gasification (PO), autothermal reforming (ATR), aqueous-phase reforming (APR) and steam reforming with supercritical water (SCW). These chemical routes depend on the properties of the catalyst used, generally Ni, Pt and Ru (which favors hydrogen production), as well as the temperature, pressure and reagent ratio. Hence, these factors should be considered when the H
2 yield is evaluated for each process [
23]. However, not many studies at a semi-industrial scale or using pilot plants have been observed, as many works show innovative trends that are interesting but only focused on a laboratory scale. Specifically, as observed in
Table 2, there are two main trends when it comes to steam reforming applied to glycerol (mainly obtained from biodiesel):
Firstly, the possible implementation of GSR in a biorefinery context based on biodiesel production was mainly assessed through simulations of integrated processes, proving that hydrogen production could contribute to the total yield found in these systems. In that sense, more works focused on semi-industrial or industrial levels could complement these works to prove the efficiency of GSR in real contexts.
Secondly, the development of new catalysts, including promoters such as La (included in this work), Ce or Mg, to improve the duration of their activity. Also, different kinds of supports, including nanocatalysts, have been considered to make the chemical conditions more efficient and stable over time. Thus, it is essential to improve the efficiency of GSR at an industrial level, to compete with traditional technologies.
Considering the above, the aim of this work was to carry out the steam reforming of glycerol in an experimental facility at a semi-industrial scale, trying to assess the effect of the temperature and catalyst load to obtain suitable gasification powers, paying attention to the feasibility of the Ni-based catalyst applied to this facility. Specifically, the outlet gas flow was optimized, as well as the hydrogen mole fraction and power. On the other hand, the selection of the best temperature and catalyst percentage to obtain the best catalytic performance was another specific objective, with different NiO concentrations used for that purpose and comparing them with non-catalytic tests. Finally, considering these comparisons, our aim was to establish the optimum operating conditions for the semi-industrial plant according to the gas flow, hydrogen mole ratio, lower calorific value and power. Thus, the real implementation of glycerol steam reforming at a semi-industrial scale is proposed, with useful information about the feasibility of this process.