2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(205c) Hydrogen Production from Municipal Solid Waste
Author
Recently, researchers at the National Energy Technologies Laboratory (NETL)[1],[2] have developed novel oxygen carriers for a three-reactor system with promising results using various solid fuels such as biomass, flax straw and MSW. They have also developed a new process to convert CO2 to CO, allowing for the production of secondary products such as methanol. The main innovation is the development of a novel oxygen carrier process, which eliminates expensive air separation steps, water gas shift reactor and CO2/H2separation steps. The process does not require an external heat source eliminating heat integration issues and associated CO2 emissions. An additional innovation is the fact that the oxygen carrier process operates below 900oC, thereby eliminating the ash melting issues encountered in traditional gasification systems that operate above 900 oC. In this research, NETLâs bench-scale experimental results will be utilized to develop a simulation of a large-scale plant in the ASPENPlus environment that utilizes MSW as feed and produces H2 as the primary product and methanol as a secondary product. This simulation will be utilized to conduct a techno-economic analysis of the entire process. The anticipated advantages of this novel process include lower H2production costs and the utilization of waste materials as feed such as MSW instead of fossil fuels, resulting in a significant reduction in MSW quantities for disposal and increasing the capacity of the existing waste management infrastructure.
[1] R.V.Siriwardane and J. Riley, âProcess for production of hydrogen with transport from chemical looping using mixture of partial oxidation oxygen carriers and combustion oxygen carriersâ, S 166,257 filed Jan 12, 2022
[2] R. V. Siriwardane and Y. Fan, âMetal Ferrite Oxygen Carriers For Gasification Of Solid Carbonaceous Fuel,â U.S. Patent 10,030,204, July 24, 2018