2021 Annual Meeting
(508g) Feasibility of Chemical Looping Ammonia Synthesis from Metal Nitrides and Hydrides and Their Alloys.
Prior analysis has identified a small number of CLAS schemes that are theoretically capable of producing ammonia at appreciable amounts without the energetically expensive requirements for high pressure of the original Haber Bosch process. Limited experimental evidence [3] supports the hypothesis that material mixtures (usually in form of metal alloys) offer advantages in the form of bifunctional carriers that allow for increased ammonia yields. To identify metals and their alloys that maximize the theoretical yields of ammonia via low-pressure, multi-step CLAS schemes, we present a comprehensive framework for evaluation of schemes and material carriers along with the optimization of reactor conditions for these schemes at steady state. First, elements from a chemical database are paired with CLAS schemes of a recent literature review [4] and are evaluated for their thermodynamic feasibility and favorability. The feasible set is then expanded to alloy carriers. Successful CLAS processes are optimized in Aspen Plus, wherein the reaction steps are assumed to be governed by Gibbs free energy minimization constraints of the chemical and phase equilibrium. Then, the performance of optimized CLAS processes is compared and ranked against metrics that measure the energy demand, initial cost and environmental impact of the process. It is shown that combining a successful nitrogen fixing element with a successful hydrogen carrying element can increase the ammonia yield of a CLAS scheme. Additionally, the combination of elements allows for the use of low cost environmentally safe materials, which can accelerate the development of CLAS processes. This work concludes with a list of successful combinations of elements and chemical loops for ammonia synthesis at low pressure.
Acknowledgements
This work was partially sponsored by the United Technologies Corporation Institute for Advanced Systems Engineering (UTC-IASE) of the University of Connecticut. Any opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not represent those of the sponsor.
References
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[3] W. Gao et al., âProduction of ammonia via a chemical looping process based on metal imides as nitrogen carriers,â Nat. Energy, vol. 3, no. 12, pp. 1067â1075, Dec. 2018.
[4] L. Burrows et al., (In Review) âFeasibility of Chemical Looping Ammonia Synthesis from Metal Nitrides and Hydrides and their Alloys,â Chem. Eng. J.