Title of article :
Methane membrane steam reforming: Heat duty assessment
Author/Authors :
De Falco، نويسنده , , M. and Piemonte، نويسنده , , V. and Di Paola، نويسنده , , L. and Basile، نويسنده , , A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
10
From page :
4761
To page :
4770
Abstract :
Membrane reactors are an innovative technology with huge application potentialities for equilibrium limited endothermic reactions. Assembling a membrane selective to a reaction product avoids the equilibrium conditions to be achieved, supporting the reactions at lower operating temperatures. Taking as an example the natural gas steam reforming, a methane conversion around 98% can be reached imposing an operating temperature of 823 K, much lower than that of the traditional process. In the present paper, a stringent analysis of heat power requirement needed to carry out the natural gas steam reforming process by applying a membrane reactor is made. The simulations allows to understand how the main operating parameters (inlet temperature, inlet methane flow-rate, steam to carbon ratio, ratio between sweeping steam and inlet methane, operating reaction pressure) influence the total heat power required by the process, divided among power contributions for the reaction heat duty, reactant steam and permeation steam generation and preheating. Moreover, the specific thermal energy per mole of pure H2 is computed and assessed. Optimizing the operating conditions set, a specific thermal energy per mole of pure hydrogen of 92.3 kWh kmol−1 is obtained corresponding to a total thermal power of 687.4 kW required to convert, in a single membrane reactor, a methane flow-rate of 2 kmol h−1 (GHSV = 9.590 h−1) with a conversion around 98%.
Keywords :
Selective membrane , Process heat duty requirements , Natural gas steam reforming , Pd-based membrane , Hydrogen production
Journal title :
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
Record number :
1867754
Link To Document :
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