Comparison of Nickel and Iron-based Oxygen Carriers Supported on Alumina in Syngas-fueled Chemical Looping Combustion

Comparison of Nickel and Iron-based Oxygen Carriers Supported on Alumina in Syngas-fueled Chemical Looping Combustion
Author: Farzin Jabbary (‡e author)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 51
Release: 2014
Genre: Aluminum oxide
ISBN:

Chemical looping is considered as a novel technology capable of resolving both energy and environmental problems in combustion process. The possibility of using oxides of nickel (Ni) and iron (Fe) as oxygen carriers was investigated. Solid oxygen carriers were prepared by deposition of metal oxides on y-Alumina (Al 2 O3 ) particles by incipient wet impregnation method. The reactivity of metal oxides was examined in a thermogravimetric analyzer (TGA), where they were exposed to syngas (34% CO, 66% H2 ) and steam for reduction, and to air (79% N2 , 21% O2) for oxidation at temperature ranging from 700°C to 900°C. Fe and Ni particles showed high reactivity at high temperatures with reduction rate of 95%/min and 85%/min, respectively. Oxidation rate for both metal oxides were 100%/min. Furthermore, nickel oxide showed promising potential to be used under cyclic conditions since it showed high strength under multiple cycles while Fe particles show sign of agglomeration which affect their reactivity during multiple cycles.

Calcium and Chemical Looping Technology for Power Generation and Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Capture

Calcium and Chemical Looping Technology for Power Generation and Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Capture
Author: Paul Fennell
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 467
Release: 2015-05-21
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0857097601

Calcium and Chemical Looping Technology for Power Generation and Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Capture reviews the fundamental principles, systems, oxygen carriers, and carbon dioxide carriers relevant to chemical looping and combustion. Chapters review the market development, economics, and deployment of these systems, also providing detailed information on the variety of materials and processes that will help to shape the future of CO2 capture ready power plants. Reviews the fundamental principles, systems, oxygen carriers, and carbon dioxide carriers relevant to calcium and chemical looping Provides a lucid explanation of advanced concepts and developments in calcium and chemical looping, high pressure systems, and alternative CO2 carriers Presents information on the market development, economics, and deployment of these systems

Redox Kinetics Study for Chemical-looping Combustion, Water and CO2 Splitting Using Nickel and Cerium-based Oxygen Carrier

Redox Kinetics Study for Chemical-looping Combustion, Water and CO2 Splitting Using Nickel and Cerium-based Oxygen Carrier
Author: Zhenlong Zhao
Publisher:
Total Pages: 448
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

Chemical-looping (CL) is a novel and promising technology for several applications including oxy-combustion for carbon capture, hydrogen production and CO2 reuse. In this process, oxygen carriers are utilized to cyclically adsorb and release oxygen producing two separated exhaust streams with desirable products. A rotary reactor design with micro-channel structure was developed in the Reacting Gas Dynamics Lab (RGDL) at MIT, which exhibits superior performance over conversional designs. Preliminary simulation identified OC redox kinetics and material characteristics as keys to the success of CL technology. This thesis examines the fundamentals of the reduction and oxidation (redox) processes with the aim of achieving fast and reliable reaction kinetics for CL applications. Experiments are conducted in a button-cell fixed-bed reactor with an on-line mass spectrometer. The timeresolved kinetics are modeled with consideration of thermodynamics, surface chemistry, transport mechanism, and structural evolution. Our approach, combining well-controlled experiment and detailed kinetics modeling, enables a new methodology for identifying the rate-limiting mechanism, examining the defect electrochemistry, and designing alternative materials for chemical-looping technology. Redox study with nickel thin foils reveals that structural evolution is the determining factor. Nickel oxidation starts via nucleation of oxide grains, which overlap and annihilate the fast diffusion paths. The model shows that the reaction is limited by the decreasing ionic diffusivity. To achieve practical redox repeatability, NiO fine particles supported on YSZ nanopowder is tested, and superior kinetics and cyclic stability are observed. Fast oxygen exchange is achieved from 500 to 1000°C with sufficient utilization of the carrying capacity within 1 min. Improvement is attributed to the enhanced ionic diffusivity with YSZ. The use of ceria nanopowder exhibits an order of magnitude H2 production rate improvement as compared to the state-of-the-art. Ceria reduction is slow with a threshold temperature of 700°C. The model reveals that the charge transfer is the rate-determining step for H2 production. Improving H2 splitting requires: (i) reducing the defect formation enthalpy, and (ii) accelerating charge-transfer. The addition of Zr lowers the threshold temperature to 650°C with 60% improvement in the rates, resulting from 40% decrease in the defect formation enthalpy. Doping ceria with Pr 3+ further lowers the threshold temperature to 600°C while doubling the peak rate. The model reveals that the high concentration of surface defects achieved from either approach promotes adsorbate formation, thus accelerating the splitting steps. Similar conclusions are obtained for CO2 splitting. Using the derived kinetics, H2-syngas co-production with CH4 as fuel is examined. Two important stages are identified: the formation of the complete products on oxidized surface, and syngas on the reduced surface. CH4 reduction is found to be rate-limited by the slow fuel cracking reaction. To accelerate the kinetics, a novel perovskite-nickel composite OC is examined, in which nickel effectively catalyzes reduction, leading to an order of magnitude faster kinetics at 600-700°C. This project has clearly demonstrated that using novel materials, CL technology can provide an efficient solution to oxy-combustion based CO2 capture, and H2/syngas co-production. Specifically, the use of NiO/YSZ achieves fast kinetics, robust stability and sufficient OC utilization from 500 to 1000°C, enabling complete CO2 capture with minimum energy penalty. The ceria-, and perovskite-based OCs exhibit over an order-of-magnitude faster kinetics compared to the state-of-the-art, enabling improved H2 production/CO 2 reduction efficiency isothermally at 600-700°C. In-depth understanding gained on the redox fundamentals will shed light on the design and fabrication of new materials as well as optimization of the CL applications.

Fluidized Bed Technologies for Near-Zero Emission Combustion and Gasification

Fluidized Bed Technologies for Near-Zero Emission Combustion and Gasification
Author: Fabrizio Scala
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 1091
Release: 2013-09-30
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0857098802

Fluidized bed (FB) combustion and gasification are advanced techniques for fuel flexible, high efficiency and low emission conversion. Fuels are combusted or gasified as a fluidized bed suspended by jets with sorbents that remove harmful emissions such as SOx. CO2 capture can also be incorporated. Fluidized bed technologies for near-zero emission combustion and gasification provides an overview of established FB technologies while also detailing recent developments in the field. Part one, an introductory section, reviews fluidization science and FB technologies and includes chapters on particle characterization and behaviour, properties of stationary and circulating fluidized beds, heat and mass transfer and attrition in FB combustion and gasification systems. Part two expands on this introduction to explore the fundamentals of FB combustion and gasification including the conversion of solid, liquid and gaseous fuels, pollutant emission and reactor design and scale up. Part three highlights recent advances in a variety of FB combustion and gasification technologies before part four moves on to focus on emerging CO2 capture technologies. Finally, part five explores other applications of FB technology including (FB) petroleum refining and chemical production. Fluidized bed technologies for near-zero emission combustion and gasification is a technical resource for power plant operators, industrial engineers working with fluidized bed combustion and gasification systems and researchers, scientists and academics in the field. Examines the fundamentals of fluidized bed (FB) technologies, including the conversion of solid, liquid and gaseous fuels Explores recent advances in a variety of technologies such as pressurized FB combustion, and the measurement, monitoring and control of FB combustion and gasification Discusses emerging technologies and examines applications of FB in other processes