2021 Annual Meeting
(473b) Conversion of Waste Plastics to Hydrogen Fuel: Techno-Economic Analysis
The need of hydrogen as a clean fuel has grabbed a lot of global attention and various processes have been developed for hydrogen production. Conversion of plastic wastes is one of an attractive option to produce H2 because of its hydrocarbon structure, higher heating value and availability. Polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) are considered in this study because of their massive worldwide availability in the category of waste plastics. In this study, the simulation of conversion of plastic wastes (PE and PP) to hydrogen fuel via steam gasification process is developed to perform the techno-economic analysis. The composition of produced syngas from steam gasification unit was validated with the literature results followed by sensitivity studies to see the impact of various process parameters on the syngas composition. The syngas produced in the stream gasification unit is then treated in the water gas shift units followed by acid gas (H2S and CO2) removal to produce pure H2. To enhance the hydrogen production capacity and overall process efficiency, plastic gasification is further integrated with the steam methane reforming (SMR) unit to utilize the heat from gasifier. This technology is based on reforming coincided with gasification to utilize the heat energy from the gasifier to provide heat to the natural gas reformer. It has been seen from results that the new integrated design containing both gasifier and reformer enhances the hydrogen mass production rate per mass feed rate by 5.6%. Furthermore, the process performance analysis showed that the efficiency of the new process is increased up to 1.82%, where the hydrogen production cost showed the reduction of 29% compared to the standalone gasification cases. In term of carbon dioxide specific emission, the new design showed the reduction in CO2 emissions by 4.0%. Overall, the technical and economic analysis favored the new design over the standalone plastic gasification case.