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Hydrogen from Renewable Fuels by Autothermal Reforming: Alcohols, Carbohydrates, and Biodiesel Lanny D. Schmidt Department of Chemical Engineering and.

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Presentation on theme: "Hydrogen from Renewable Fuels by Autothermal Reforming: Alcohols, Carbohydrates, and Biodiesel Lanny D. Schmidt Department of Chemical Engineering and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Hydrogen from Renewable Fuels by Autothermal Reforming: Alcohols, Carbohydrates, and Biodiesel Lanny D. Schmidt Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science University of Minnesota Minneapolis MN 55455 Schmidt@cems.umn.edu

2 Producing Hydrogen Steam reforming Fuel + H 2 O H 2 + CO Water Gas Shift CO + H 2 O CO 2 + H 2 95% of H 2 is made by this process Endothermic process Requires tube furnace Does not scale down Catalytic Partial Oxidation Fuel + O 2 H 2 + CO Need H 2 for large and small applications Gas to liquids refineries Fueling station Portable power   

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4 Catalytic Partial Oxidation Converts hydrocarbons into valuable chemicals: syngas (H 2 & CO), olefins, oxygenates, etc. Exothermic process Runs auto-thermally Short contact times (Milliseconds) Vapor phase reactions Reactants Products Heat Shields Catalyst Quartz Tube

5 Hydrogen and Chemicals in Millisecond Reactors Hydrogen Economy Distributed power Fuel cells Pollution abatement Renewable energy Renewable chemicals

6 Reactions CH 4  H 2 + CO  synfuels  methanol   H 2 hydrogen economy gasoline  H 2 portable power diesel  H 2 alcohols  H 2 renewable energy carbohydrates  H 2 biodiesel  H 2 olefinsrenewable chemicals

7 Renewable Hydrogen Hydrolysis Fermentation Biomass Wastes Sugar Hydrogen Methanol Dimethyl ether FT liquids Ethanol Propanol H 2 Glycerol Power Ammonia Wind H 2 +O 2 Electrolysis Heat Syngas catalyst

8 Reactor air Fuel Injector Thermocouple Insulation Products Thermocouple Heating Catalyst Mixer fuel

9 Methane to Syngas Rh Catalyst, 5 SLPM Total Flow, no preheat 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 0.70.80.91.01.1 C/O Conversion/Selectivity 650 750 850 950 1050 Temperature C H2H2 CO CH 4 Temperature

10 Gasoline and Diesel to Syngas High boiling points, >300 o C Pyrolysis before vaporization Polycyclic aromatics Mixtures

11 Hexadecane Partial Oxidation 80 ppi  -Al 2 O 3, ~3 wt%  -Al 2 O 3, ~3 wt% Rh C/O Feed 0.61.42.23.0 S (%) 0 20 40 60 80 CO H2H2 CO 2 H2OH2O Olefins 4 SLPM

12 Reactor Tunability Syngas  Ethylene   -Olefins C/O ~ 1 ~ 1.3 ~ 2.0 S(%) ~ 85 ~ 36 ~ 60 45 or 80 ppi  -Al 2 O 3 0-3 wt%  -Al 2 O 3 wash-coat ~1-5 wt% Rh Ethylene  -Olefins Syngas Reactants

13 Steam Addition 80 ppi  -Al 2 O 3 monolith ~4 wt%  -Al 2 O 3 wash- coat ~2 wt% Rh 4 SLPM Steam to Carbon ratio of 1 Air Fuel Injector Thermocouple Heating Catalyst Mixers Water Injector Insulation

14 Steam Addition 80 ppi  -Al 2 O 3, ~4 wt%  -Al 2 O 3, ~2 wt% Rh, 4 SLPM, S/C = 1 C/O Feed 0.60.91.21.51.82.1 0 30 60 90 120 150 CO H2H2 CO 2 Olefins C/O Feed 0.60.91.21.51.82.1 500 700 900 1100 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 C 10 O2O2 H2OH2O S X

15 Catalysis Surface area not important all ~2 m 2 /g  -Al 2 O 3 converted to a after heating to 1000 o C metals form films 1  m thick All conversions 100% mostly complete in first mm Selectivities dominate wash coat and small channels makes hydrogen no wash coat and large channels makes olefins

16 10% Rhodium Before and After Use

17 Spatial and Transient Analysis microcapillary Side hole sampling No void behind the capillary Minimal disruptions to the flow field Capillary can move in and out Spatial temporal profiles 80 ppi45 ppi.05 sec, 0.3 mm resolution

18 Spatial Analysis: Experimental Results Catalyst: Rhodium Washcoat 80 ppi Methanation observed in simulations Repeatable

19 Transient Switch C/O

20 Spatial-temporal profiles monolith heat shield

21 Spatial-temporal profiles

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23 Hydrogen and Chemicals from Biomass biodiesel alcohols glycols glycerol sugar carbohydrates trees

24 Renewable Chemicals From Biodiesel Soy oil + CH 3 OH  biodiesel + glycerol isomers with 1, 2, and 3 double bonds 2% in Minnesota diesel pool in 2005 C-O-CH 3 O methyl linoleate 52%

25 Renewable Chemicals biodiesel  H 2 80%  olefins90%  ethylene, propylene50%

26 CH 3 OH Autoignition : 464  C Boiling Point : 65  C Flammability Limits: 6.0-36.0% in air CH 3 CH 2 OH Autoignition : 363  C Boiling Point : 78  C Flammability Limits: 3.3-24.5% in air Ethanol Methanol 2-Propanol 1-Propanol CH 3 CHOHCH 3 Autoignition : 399  C Boiling Point : 82  C Flammability Limits : 2.0-12.0% in air CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 OH Autoignition : 371  C Boiling Point : 97  C Flammability Limits: 2.1-13.5% in air

27 panol 50 60 70 80 90 100 0.511.522.533.5 C/O X Methanol Ethanol 2-propanol 1-propanol Fuel Conversion and Temperature X T 2-propanol is least reactive Temperature increases with increase in chain length

28 0 20 40 60 80 100 0.511.522.533.5 C/O S H2 Methanol Ethanol 1-propanol 2-propanol 0 20 40 60 80 100 0.511.522.533.5 C/O S co Methanol Ethanol 2-propanol 1-propanol Syngas H 2 CO Syngas production increases with increase in chain length Straight chain alcohols produce more syngas than 2- propanol

29 1-Propanol and 2-Propanol Products 2-Propanol Partial Oxidation H 2 and CO Dehydration C3H6C3H6 CH 3 COCH 3 Dehydrogenation Combustion H 2 O and CO 2 √ Products √ √ 25% Other Products C2H4C2H4 √ 60% 70% √ 35% 5% 2-Propanol 1-Propanol 90% 25% 25% *** 5% 25% *** Propanal selectivity

30 photosynthesis h 2 CO 2 + 2 C 2 H 5 OH + 4 H 2 O 6 CO 2 + 10 H 2 ∆H o = +20 ∆G o = -210 ∆H o = -140 ∆G o = -330 6 CO 2 +10 H 2 O 5 O 2 O2O2 ∆H o = -2420 ∆G o = -2290 reformed ethanol fuel cell C 6 H 12 O 6 + 4 H 2 O 6 CO 2 +10 H 2 O ∆H o = +2540 ∆G o = +2830 sugar fuel cell 6 O 2 Energy Diagram for Ethanol

31 Carbohydrates H-(CH 2 O)-H H-(CH 2 O) 2 -H Methanol Boiling Point = 65 o C Ethylene Glycol Boiling Point = 195 o C Glycerol Boiling Point = 290 o C H-(CH 2 O) 3 -H

32 Mechanism Surface ROH  RO(s)  H 2 + CO surface alkoxy makes syngas only C 1 species Homogeneous H. H 3 C -C - CH 3  H 3 C -C - CH 3  H 3 C -C - CH 3 OH OH || O chemistry very selective no secondary products

33 Mechanism Oxidation zone surface chemistry hotter no carbon makes mostly C 1 products Reforming zone no oxygen homogeneous chemistry contains carbon makes olefins C 10 H 22 CO H 2 CO 2 H 2 O Reactants Products C 10 H 22 + O 2 Rh Pt C 2 H 4  olefins H 2 CO CO 2 H 2 O

34 Why Does it Work? High flow velocities High T High T gradients Fastest reactions dominate Inhibit homogeneous reactions Successive reactions inhibited Inhibits carbon buildup Challenges mixtures sulfur modeling

35 Summary Higher alkanes can be converted to H 2 and olefins >80% H 2 >140% H 2 with steam added 80% olefins 50% ethylene and propylene Alcohols and carbohydrates can be converted to H 2 steam reforming and partial oxidation 4 H 2 per C 2 H 5 OH Biodiesel can be converted to olefins and olefinic esters 80% H 2 40% ethylene and propylene ester linkage preserved >20% olefinic esters


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