Chemical Looping Partial Oxidation and Hydrogen Production: Process Simulation, Exergy Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kong, Fanhe
Language:English
Published: The Ohio State University / OhioLINK 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1587591727870495
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record_format oai_dc
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language English
sources NDLTD
topic Chemical Engineering
energy
carbon capture
chemical looping
process simulation
spellingShingle Chemical Engineering
energy
carbon capture
chemical looping
process simulation
Kong, Fanhe
Chemical Looping Partial Oxidation and Hydrogen Production: Process Simulation, Exergy Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment
author Kong, Fanhe
author_facet Kong, Fanhe
author_sort Kong, Fanhe
title Chemical Looping Partial Oxidation and Hydrogen Production: Process Simulation, Exergy Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment
title_short Chemical Looping Partial Oxidation and Hydrogen Production: Process Simulation, Exergy Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment
title_full Chemical Looping Partial Oxidation and Hydrogen Production: Process Simulation, Exergy Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment
title_fullStr Chemical Looping Partial Oxidation and Hydrogen Production: Process Simulation, Exergy Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Chemical Looping Partial Oxidation and Hydrogen Production: Process Simulation, Exergy Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment
title_sort chemical looping partial oxidation and hydrogen production: process simulation, exergy analysis and life cycle assessment
publisher The Ohio State University / OhioLINK
publishDate 2020
url http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1587591727870495
work_keys_str_mv AT kongfanhe chemicalloopingpartialoxidationandhydrogenproductionprocesssimulationexergyanalysisandlifecycleassessment
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spelling ndltd-OhioLink-oai-etd.ohiolink.edu-osu15875917278704952021-08-03T07:14:39Z Chemical Looping Partial Oxidation and Hydrogen Production: Process Simulation, Exergy Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment Kong, Fanhe Chemical Engineering energy carbon capture chemical looping process simulation Despite the rapid development of renewable energy technologies, fossil fuels still account for the majority of the energy consumed by human activities. The modern society is faced with two concerns raised by the massive consumption of fossil fuels, including the potential shortage and exhaustion of fossil fuels in the future due to their non-renewable nature, and the emissions of CO2 and other pollutants associated with fossil fuel combustion and conversion processes. To address these challenges, it is essential to simultaneously improve the energy efficiency and to incorporate CO2 capture and pollution abatement strategies into these energy conversion processes. However, conventional CO2 capture technologies are usually energy-intensive, which further lowers the energy efficiency of the overall systems and aggravates the upcoming energy shortage concern. To address these issues, it is urgent for novel technologies that can perform CO2 capture while maintaining high energy efficiency to be developed and implemented. Besides, efficient utilization of renewable fuels such as biogas as substitutes for fossil fuels also requires considerable research efforts.Chemical looping provides a novel and versatile technology platform for fossil and renewable energy conversions. Chemical looping achieves in situ CO2 separation and capture without adding extra CO2 capture units. As a result, the energy efficiency of chemical looping processes with near complete CO2 capture is comparable to conventional systems without CO2 capture. Chemical looping technology is not only applicable to electricity production, but also to chemical synthesis and H2 production, with more intensified process schematics and higher energy efficiency than conventional systems.This dissertation encompasses the studies on the utilization of chemical looping technology for chemicals and H2 production and electricity generation from a process system perspective. Process simulation is conducted on five chemical looping system configurations, including natural gas to dimethyl ether conversion, coal to dimethyl ether conversion, natural gas to H2 conversion, coal to H2 to electricity conversion, and biogas to H2 conversion. The mass and heat balances are calculated and autothermal operations are established for each process. The energy efficiency, including cold gas efficiency, effective thermal efficiency, and net plant efficiency, are compared between chemical looping processes and conventional systems to quantify the benefits of utilizing chemical looping technology for fossil and renewable energy conversions. To view the benefits of chemical looping technology from a different perspective, exergy analysis is conducted on two of the five studied systems. Exergy is defined as the maximum work that can be derived during a process that brings a system into equilibrium with its environment. Exergy analysis pinpoints the locations of irreversibility and exergy destruction within a process system, hence providing a clearer view of the fundamental reasons for chemical looping to be more energy efficient than conventional processes.Finally, a life cycle assessment is conducted on the chemical looping natural gas to hydrogen process, and the results are compared to conventional steam methane reforming systems with and without CO2 capture. The life cycle assessment tracks the greenhouse gas emissions of the process from a cradle-to-grave viewpoint and hence presents a more holistic picture of its environmental impacts. The life cycle assessment results provide new insights into optimizing the performance and reducing the environmental impacts of chemical looping technologies. 2020-10-12 English text The Ohio State University / OhioLINK http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1587591727870495 http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1587591727870495 restricted--full text unavailable until 2025-05-13 This thesis or dissertation is protected by copyright: all rights reserved. It may not be copied or redistributed beyond the terms of applicable copyright laws.