2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(712f) Solar High-Temperature Processes for Solar Fuels Production and Solar Energy Storage Applications
Authors
The so-called â??closed-loopâ? WS
CH4 + H2O + (Î?H) â?? 3 H2 + CO |
â?¦(1) |
|
â?¦(2) |
2 HÂ2SO4Â (l)Â+ (Î?H) â?? 2 SO3 (g) + 2 H2O (g) |
â?¦(3) |
2 SO3 (g)+ (Î?H) â?? 2 SO2 (g) + O2 (g) |
â?¦(4) |
2 SO2 (g) + 4 H2O (l) â?? 2 H2ÂSO4 (l)+ 2 H2 (g)Â (electrolysis) |
â?¦(5) |
MeOoxidized + (Î?H) â?? MeOreduced + ½ O2 (g) |
â?¦(6) |
MeOreduced + H2O (g) â?? MeOoxidized + H2 (g) + (Î?H) |
...(7) |
MeOreduced + CO2 (g) â?? MeOoxidised + CO (g)+ (Î?H) |
...(8) |
Similar chemistry schemes can be employed in the same solar thermal power plant for the so-called
2H2O(l)+3SO2(g)â?? 2H2SO4(aq)+ S(s) (disproportionation) |
...(9) |
S(l) + O2(g) â?? SO2(g) |
...(10) |
MeOreduced + O2 (g) + (N2 (g)) â?? MeOox + (N2 (g)) + (Î?H) |
...(11) |
Large scale production of solar fuels will require the economies of scale offered by heliostat fields with central tower receivers that can comfortably generate solar thermal fluxes in the MW capacity, although the deployment of such fields to date has been limited to electricity generation. For the efficient design and operation of solar aided-reactors for such processes, concepts from â??traditionalâ? chemical reactor engineering should be combined with ways to achieve efficient heating of the reactor via concentrated solar irradiation. Among the endothermic steps of the reaction schemes above, reforming and SO3 splitting are catalytic reactions of gases on a solid catalyst surface. In contrast redox oxide-based cycles involve gas-solid reactions where the solid reactant (metal oxide) is not a â??catalystâ? present in much smaller quantities than those of the gaseous reactants, but a reactant itself, with non-negligible mass, that not only has to be heated to the reaction temperature but gets progressively depleted during the course of the reaction, having to be replenished. Therefore it either has to be fed constantly into the reactor if the reactions are to be performed in a continuous-mode, or alternatively, practical ways have to be â??inventedâ? for itsâ?? in-situ regeneration imposing rather challenging reactor operation conditions.
All processes described above, reforming, splitting and TCS, involve not only gas-solid chemical contact and reaction but heat exchange between either the solar receiver and the heat transfer fluid (SMR/DMR, WS/CDS) or the heat transfer fluid and the storage medium (TCS). The major technical challenge for these applications lies in the proper design and operation of reforming/splitting/storage reactors that will operate simultaneously and efficiently as heat exchangers. The two main research tasks are the improvement of solar interfaces and integrated heat recovery schemes in the one hand and solving the main materials-related issues and providing the right functional materials at reasonable costs in the other hand. The present analysis gives an overview on the recent developments and state-of-the art of those concepts at DLR as well as at international level, emphasizing on the most important performance parameters involved and the commonalities that can lead to convergence of reactor concepts employed up until now in different applications. Finally, the current outlook on further potential and necessary developments in the areas of solar fuels production and the use of chemical reactions to store solar heat is discussed.