Synthetic natural gas production from CO2 and green hydrogen provides a promising route to renewable energy storage. Reactants maximum conversion degree, limited by CO2 methanation strong exothermicity, can be enhanced by in situ water removal. In this work, reaction/adsorption step of a sorption-enhanced methanation process was modelled using a two-dimensional, heterogeneous, and dynamical model of an externally cooled fixed bed reactor. A bifunctional pellet (Ni on 13X zeolite) was considered. Internal/external catalyst mass and heat transfer resistances were assessed. Effect of variations in gas space velocity (GHSV) and operating pressure on produced methane purity and effective operational time length have been evaluated through a sensitivity analysis. Results show that a pure and dry methane flow was produced until a reactant’s breakthrough occurs. At any given operating pressure, there is a non-linear negative correlation between GHSV and breakthrough times. Conversely, for any given GHSV, an increase in operating pressure increases breakthrough time.
Numerical modelling of a sorption-enhanced methanation system
Bareschino, Piero;Piso, Giuseppe;Pepe, Francesco;Tregambi, Claudio
;Mancusi, Erasmo
2023-01-01
Abstract
Synthetic natural gas production from CO2 and green hydrogen provides a promising route to renewable energy storage. Reactants maximum conversion degree, limited by CO2 methanation strong exothermicity, can be enhanced by in situ water removal. In this work, reaction/adsorption step of a sorption-enhanced methanation process was modelled using a two-dimensional, heterogeneous, and dynamical model of an externally cooled fixed bed reactor. A bifunctional pellet (Ni on 13X zeolite) was considered. Internal/external catalyst mass and heat transfer resistances were assessed. Effect of variations in gas space velocity (GHSV) and operating pressure on produced methane purity and effective operational time length have been evaluated through a sensitivity analysis. Results show that a pure and dry methane flow was produced until a reactant’s breakthrough occurs. At any given operating pressure, there is a non-linear negative correlation between GHSV and breakthrough times. Conversely, for any given GHSV, an increase in operating pressure increases breakthrough time.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.