A fluidized bed membrane reactor for steam methane reforming: experimental verification and model validation
Steam reforming of light hydrocarbons, especially natural gas, is an industrially important chemical reaction and a key step for producing hydrogen and syngas for ammonia and methanol production, hydrocracking and hydrotreating, oxo-alcohol and Fischer-Tropsch synthesis and other essential proce...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-69802018-01-05T17:33:30Z A fluidized bed membrane reactor for steam methane reforming: experimental verification and model validation Adris, Alaa-Eldin M. Steam reforming of light hydrocarbons, especially natural gas, is an industrially important chemical reaction and a key step for producing hydrogen and syngas for ammonia and methanol production, hydrocracking and hydrotreating, oxo-alcohol and Fischer-Tropsch synthesis and other essential processes in the petroleum and petrochemical industries. However, industrial fixed bed steam reformers suffer from several problems which seriously affect the operation and performance of these reactors: low catalyst effectiveness due to mass transfer resistance, low heat transfer rates, large temperature gradients and thermodynamic equilibrium constraints. These problems with conventional reformers can be alleviated by using a new fluidized bed membrane reactor (FBMR) system. The FBMR system combines the several advantages of fhiidized beds as catalytic chemical reactors, in particular catalyst bed uniformity, improved heat transfer and virtual elimfriation of diflhsional limitations, with advantages offered by permselective membrane technology, in particular shifting the conventional thermodynamic equilibrium and the in-situ separation and removal of a desirable reaction product. A pilot scale reforming plant was designed, constructed and commissioned to prove the concept of the new reactor system and to study its properties. The pilot reactor system had a hydrogen production capacity of 6 m³[STP]Ih and was designed to withstand temperatures up to 750 C and pressures up to 1.5 MPa. The reactor had a main body of inside diameter 97 mm and length 1.143 m, in addition to an expansion section of inside diameter 191 mm and length 0.3 05 in. The reactor was provided with thin-walled palladium-based tubes as hydrogen permseleotive membranes. The work presented in this thesis shows the reforming catalyst to be fluidizable, when the proper particle size range is used, and able to withstand the mechanical environment of the fluidized bed reactor to a reasonable extent. The investigation also indicates that fluidized bed process with hydrogen removal via permselective membrane tubes is feasible from a technical point ofview. Advantages of the new process demonstrated by this study include major decreases in the reactor size and in the amount of catalyst required, withdrawal of a very pure hydrogen product, operation beyond normal conversion limits imposed by thermodynamic equilibrium and suppression of undesirable (backward) reactions in the freeboard region. The shifi of the reaction equilibrium reduces the reforming reactor energy requirements and is advantageous from an environmental point ofview. Economic feasibility ofthe new reactor system will improve as technical improvements are made in membranes to allow, for example, thin uniform layers of palladium or nickel on a porous ceramic or sintered metal substrate. Applied Science, Faculty of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Department of Graduate 2009-04-08T23:52:48Z 2009-04-08T23:52:48Z 1994 1994-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/6980 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 5690493 bytes application/pdf |
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English |
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Others
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Steam reforming of light hydrocarbons, especially natural gas, is an industrially
important chemical reaction and a
key step for producing hydrogen and syngas for
ammonia and methanol production, hydrocracking and hydrotreating, oxo-alcohol and
Fischer-Tropsch synthesis and other essential processes in the petroleum and
petrochemical industries. However, industrial fixed bed steam reformers suffer from
several problems which seriously affect the operation and performance of these reactors:
low catalyst effectiveness due to mass transfer resistance, low heat transfer rates, large
temperature gradients and thermodynamic equilibrium constraints. These problems with
conventional reformers can be alleviated by using a new fluidized bed membrane reactor
(FBMR) system. The FBMR system combines the several advantages of fhiidized beds as
catalytic chemical reactors, in particular catalyst bed uniformity, improved heat transfer
and virtual elimfriation of diflhsional limitations, with advantages offered by permselective
membrane technology, in particular shifting the conventional thermodynamic equilibrium
and the in-situ separation and removal of a
desirable reaction product.
A pilot scale reforming plant was designed, constructed and commissioned to prove the
concept of the new reactor system and to study its properties. The pilot reactor system
had a
hydrogen production capacity of 6 m³[STP]Ih and was designed to withstand
temperatures up to 750 C and pressures up to 1.5 MPa. The reactor had a main body of
inside diameter 97 mm and length 1.143 m, in addition to an expansion section of inside
diameter 191 mm and length 0.3 05 in. The reactor was provided with thin-walled
palladium-based tubes as hydrogen permseleotive membranes.
The work presented in this thesis shows the reforming catalyst to be fluidizable, when
the proper particle size range is used, and able to withstand the mechanical environment of
the fluidized bed reactor to a reasonable extent. The investigation also indicates that fluidized bed process with hydrogen removal via permselective membrane tubes is feasible
from a technical point ofview.
Advantages of the new process demonstrated by this study include major decreases in
the reactor size and in the amount of catalyst required, withdrawal of a very pure
hydrogen product, operation beyond normal conversion limits imposed by thermodynamic
equilibrium and suppression of undesirable (backward) reactions in the freeboard region.
The shifi of the reaction equilibrium reduces the reforming reactor energy requirements
and is advantageous from an environmental point ofview.
Economic feasibility ofthe new reactor system will improve as technical improvements
are made in membranes to allow, for example, thin uniform layers of palladium or nickel
on a porous ceramic or sintered metal substrate. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Chemical and Biological Engineering, Department of === Graduate |
author |
Adris, Alaa-Eldin M. |
spellingShingle |
Adris, Alaa-Eldin M. A fluidized bed membrane reactor for steam methane reforming: experimental verification and model validation |
author_facet |
Adris, Alaa-Eldin M. |
author_sort |
Adris, Alaa-Eldin M. |
title |
A fluidized bed membrane reactor for steam methane reforming: experimental verification and model validation |
title_short |
A fluidized bed membrane reactor for steam methane reforming: experimental verification and model validation |
title_full |
A fluidized bed membrane reactor for steam methane reforming: experimental verification and model validation |
title_fullStr |
A fluidized bed membrane reactor for steam methane reforming: experimental verification and model validation |
title_full_unstemmed |
A fluidized bed membrane reactor for steam methane reforming: experimental verification and model validation |
title_sort |
fluidized bed membrane reactor for steam methane reforming: experimental verification and model validation |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/6980 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT adrisalaaeldinm afluidizedbedmembranereactorforsteammethanereformingexperimentalverificationandmodelvalidation AT adrisalaaeldinm fluidizedbedmembranereactorforsteammethanereformingexperimentalverificationandmodelvalidation |
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