Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5147309 International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2017 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
Production of high purity hydrogen (<50 ppm CO) by steam-iron process (SIP) from a synthetic sweetened biogas has been investigated making use of a natural iron ore containing up to 81 wt% of hematite (Fe2O3) as oxygen carrier. The presence of a lab-made catalyst (NiAl2O4 with NiO excess above its stoichiometric composition) was required to carry out the significant transformation of mixtures of methane and carbon dioxide in hydrogen and carbon monoxide by methane dry reforming reaction. Three consecutive sub-stages have been identified along the reduction stage that comprise A) the combustion of CH4 by lattice oxygen of NiO and Fe2O3, B) catalyzed methane dry reforming and C) G-G equilibrium described by the Water-Gas-Shift reaction. Oxidation stages were carried out with steam completing the cycle. Oxidation temperature was always kept constant at 500 °C regardless of the temperature used in the previous reduction to minimize the gasification of eventual carbon deposits formed along the previous reduction stage. The presence of other oxides different from hematite in minor proportions (SiO2, Al2O3, CaO and MgO to name the most significant) confers it an increased thermal resistance against sintering respecting pure hematite at the expense of slowing down the reduction and oxidation rates. A “tailor made” hematite with additives (Al2O3 and CeO2) in minor proportions (2 wt%) has been used to stablish comparisons in performance between natural and synthetic iron oxides. It has been investigated the effect of the reduction temperature, the proportion of methane to carbon dioxide in the feed (CH4:CO2 ratio) and the number of repetitive redox cycles.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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