Field-Scale Testing of a High-Efficiency Membrane Reactor (MR)—Adsorptive Reactor (AR) Process for H2 Generation and Pre-Combustion CO2 Capture
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The lab-scale experimental MR-AR system was designed, constructed, and tested, appropriate CMSM, adsorbents, and catalysts were selected and characterized, and experimentally validated relevant multi-scale mathematical models were developed. Subsequently, the proposed process was experimentally tested using a simulated gasifier off-gas (from both air-blown and oxygen-blown coal gasifiers), and based on the lab-scale results, an initial technical and economic feasibility study was completed.
- For use in the lab-scale experiments, “state-of-the-art” leading CMSMs we prepared with exceptional performance meeting all the original project targets (set forth by US DOE, which funded the laboratory study): H2 permeance (1 to 1.5 m3/m2/h/bar, or 370.3 to 555.5 GPU) and a H2/CO selectivity of >80 in the relevant temperature (up to 300 °C) and pressure conditions (up to 25 bar). The CMSMs exhibited very robust and stable performances during a continuous long-term run (over >500 h of H2S exposure at 25 bar of pressure) and maintained high He/N2 (~126) and H2/CO (~100) selectivities over a total of 742 h of H2S exposure. The same type of CMSM but with a larger length was utilized in the pilot-scale project.
- Hydrotalcite (HTC) adsorbents were prepared and characterized in high (up to 30 bar) pressure conditions. These materials showed maximum CO2 uptake capacities of >10 wt.% and working capacities under cyclic AR conditions of ~3 wt.% and exhibited stable performance during CO2 cycling in various atmospheres, including a >500-h continuous MR-AR run. A commercial sour-shift catalyst was utilized in the lab-scale experiments, and data-validated global rate expressions were developed to simulate the lab-scale MR-AR system as well as in the generation of a preliminary process technoeconomic analysis (TEA). The same adsorbents and catalysts were used in the field-scale project.
- The integrated MR-AR lab-scale system was tested during numerous multiple-cycle runs with simulated gasifier off-gas and displayed superior performance to that of a conventional packed bed reactor (PBR) generating a high-purity H2 product, which is directly usable in a hydrogen turbine for power generation. A key conclusion from the lab-scale study that motivated the field-scale efforts was that the CMSM, catalyst, and adsorbent were very robust and stable under the large H2S concentration, high-temperature, and high-pressure IGCC-like environment during the long-period lab-scale MR-AR multiple-cycle run (similar in duration to the field-scale test).
2. Results and Discussion
2.1. Design, Construction, Assembly, and Preliminary Testing of the Field-Scale Unit
2.2. Installation and Operation of the Field-Scale Unit at the Test Site
2.3. Post-Mortem Materials Characterization
2.4. Detailed TEA Study
- MRs and ARs replace the WGS reactors in the syngas clean-up (reaction) section of the plant. The MRs feature simultaneous H2 and CO2 generation and H2 removal, while the ARs feature simultaneous H2 and CO2 generation and CO2 removal.
- H2 and CO2 removal is facilitated by multidirectional steam flows during MR operation and AR regeneration, respectively.
- A single-stage Selexol unit is employed in the MR-AR IGCC plant for H2S removal only, as opposed to a dual-stage Selexol unit employed in the baseline case for both CO2 and H2S removal.
- Several of the MR-AR IGCC case studies presented feature elevated syngas humidification, which leads to the generation of humidified H2, whose combustion in the combustion turbine (CT) occurs at reduced temperatures and to the production of saleable N2 that is generated in the Air Separation Unit (ASU).
- A case study also involves ASU modification for the production and sale of both N2 and Ar.
- A capacity factor (CF) of 80% was used for the MR-AR IGCC plant.
- The combustion turbine (CT) operating philosophy is 2 × 232 MWe for a gross output of 464 MWe.
- Air pollution controls meet the applicable New Source Performance Standard (NSPS) targets for sulfur dioxide (SO2) [0.40 lb/MWh-gross], nitrogen oxides (NOx) [0.70 lb/MWh-gross], and particulate matter (PM) [0.07 lb/MWh-gross]. Mercury (Hg) and HCl removal devices meet the Utility Mercury and Air Toxics Standard (MATS) targets of [3 × 10−6 lb/MWh-gross] and [0.002 lb/MWh-gross], respectively. To meet these standards, H2S is converted into elemental sulfur in a Claus plant with tail gas recycle to limit SO2 emissions; NOx is minimized with the use of low-NOx burners (LNBs) and N2 dilution, as well as with syngas humidification; PM is controlled via water quench and the use of a syngas scrubber and a cyclone; Hg is controlled via sulfur-impregnated carbon beds; HCl is removed from the syngas scrubber with a brine concentrator and crystallizer.
- CO2 capture is greater than or equal to 90%.
- Steady-state process simulations with material and energy balances were used to size various process equipment for cost estimation.
- Capital and operating cost estimates are reported in 2018 dollars.
- The levelized price of coal (Illinois No. 6, Midwest) is $2.11/GJ on a higher heating value (HHV) basis and CO2 transport and storage (T&S) cost is $10/tonne ($9/ton).
3. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Dataset | Average Feed Composition [CO/CO2/H2/H2O/N2] | Feed Pressure [psig] | Temp. [°C] | Flow Rate [scfm] | Measured MR CO Conv. [%] | Simulated MR CO Conv. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
12-9 | 23.99/36.25/21.13/7.57/11.06 | 285 | 250 | 0.482 | 53 | 46 |
12-13 | 16.35/38.75/16.57/25.84/2.49 | 249 | 240 | 0.585 | 39 | 41 |
12-14 | 12.75/32.76/13.90/30.10/10.49 | 255 | 249 | 0.614 | 51 | 52 |
12-15 | 14.58/29.90/14.37/29.87/11.28 | 245 | 263 | 0.626 | 52 | 46 |
Dataset | Average Feed Composition [CO/CO2/H2/H2O/N2] | Feed Pressure [psig] | Temp. [°C] | Flow Rate [scfm] | Measured MR CO Conv. [%] | Simulated MR CO Conv. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st MR Test | 15.29/37.09/15.19/22.94/9.49 | 258 | 265 | 0.328 | 35 | 34 |
2nd MR Test | 15.73/30.80/16.19/23.60/13.68 | 255 | 265 | 0.284 | 32 | 30 |
9.34/24.12/9.05/37.37/20.12 | 220 | 265 | 0.284 | 75 | 74 |
Net Power | LCOE (Excluding T&S) | CO2 Captured | Cost of CO2 Captured | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Plant | MW | $/MWh | tonne/MWh | $/tonne |
Reference Non-capture Plant COE * | 650 | 64.4 | - | - |
Baseline IGCC Plant COE (Case B5B) | 556 | 144.2 | 0.814 | 98.06 |
MR-AR IGCC Plant (with N2 Compression) | 585 | 130.7 | 0.823 | 80.60 |
MR-AR IGCC Plant with N2 Sales @ $30/ton (with N2 Compression) | 586 | 101.2 | 0.823 | 44.76 |
MR-AR IGCC Plant with N2 Sales @ $30/ton (with no N2 Compression) | 623 | 95.3 | 0.774 | 39.87 |
MR-AR IGCC Plant with Ar Sales @ $4.0/kg (with N2 Compression) | 586 | 64.6 | 0.823 | 0.27 |
MR-AR IGCC Plant with Ar Sales @ $4.0/kg (with no N2 Compression) | 623 | 60.8 | 0.774 | −4.62 |
Case B5B (Baseline) | MR-AR with N2 Compression | MR-AR (N2 Sale @ $30/ton, No N2 Compression) | MR-AR (N2 Sale @ $30/ton, N2 Compression) | MR-AR (Ar Sale @ $4.0/kg, No N2 Compression) | MR-AR (Ar Sale @ $4.0/kg, N2 Compression) | Target | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carbon Capture | 90% | 96% | 96% | 96% | 96% | 96% | N/A |
CO2 Purity | 99.5% | 99.9% | 99.9% | 99.9% | 99.9% | 99.9% | 95.0% |
Net power Production (MWe) | 556 | 586 | 623 | 586 | 623 | 586 | N/A |
LCOE (Excluding T&S), $/MWh | 144.2 | 130.7 | 95.3 | 101.2 | 60.8 | 64.6 | 100.9 |
CO2 Captured Cost, $/tonne | 98.1 | 84.7 | 41.3 | 46.5 | −4.6 | 0.3 | N/A |
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Margull, N.; Parsley, D.; Somiari, I.; Zhao, L.; Cao, M.; Koumoulis, D.; Liu, P.K.T.; Manousiouthakis, V.I.; Tsotsis, T.T. Field-Scale Testing of a High-Efficiency Membrane Reactor (MR)—Adsorptive Reactor (AR) Process for H2 Generation and Pre-Combustion CO2 Capture. Membranes 2024, 14, 51. https://doi.org/10.3390/membranes14020051
Margull N, Parsley D, Somiari I, Zhao L, Cao M, Koumoulis D, Liu PKT, Manousiouthakis VI, Tsotsis TT. Field-Scale Testing of a High-Efficiency Membrane Reactor (MR)—Adsorptive Reactor (AR) Process for H2 Generation and Pre-Combustion CO2 Capture. Membranes. 2024; 14(2):51. https://doi.org/10.3390/membranes14020051
Chicago/Turabian StyleMargull, Nicholas, Doug Parsley, Ibubeleye Somiari, Linghao Zhao, Mingyuan Cao, Dimitrios Koumoulis, Paul K. T. Liu, Vasilios I. Manousiouthakis, and Theodore T. Tsotsis. 2024. "Field-Scale Testing of a High-Efficiency Membrane Reactor (MR)—Adsorptive Reactor (AR) Process for H2 Generation and Pre-Combustion CO2 Capture" Membranes 14, no. 2: 51. https://doi.org/10.3390/membranes14020051
APA StyleMargull, N., Parsley, D., Somiari, I., Zhao, L., Cao, M., Koumoulis, D., Liu, P. K. T., Manousiouthakis, V. I., & Tsotsis, T. T. (2024). Field-Scale Testing of a High-Efficiency Membrane Reactor (MR)—Adsorptive Reactor (AR) Process for H2 Generation and Pre-Combustion CO2 Capture. Membranes, 14(2), 51. https://doi.org/10.3390/membranes14020051