Low-Carbon Monoxide Hydrogen by Sorption-Enhanced Reaction

Douglas P. Harrison, Gordon and Mary Cain Department of Chemical Engineering, Louisiana State University
Zhiyong Peng, Gordon and Mary Cain Department of Chemical Engineering, Louisiana State University

Abstract

Hydrogen is an increasingly important chemical raw material and a probable future primary energy carrier. In many current and anticipated applications the carbon monoxide impurity level must be reduced to low-ppmv levels to avoid poisoning catalysts in downstream processes. Methanation is currently used to remove carbon monoxide in petroleum refining operations while preferential oxidation (PROX) is being developed for carbon monoxide control in fuel cells. Both approaches add an additional step to the multi-step hydrogen production process, and both inevitably result in hydrogen loss. The sorption enhanced process for hydrogen production, in which steam-methane reforming, water-gas shift, and carbon dioxide removal reactions occur simultaneously in the presence of a nickel-based reforming catalyst and a calcium-based carbon dioxide sorbent, is capable of producing high purity hydrogen containing minimal carbon monoxide in a single processing step. The process also has the potential for producing pure CO2 that is suitable for subsequent use or sequestration during the sorbent regeneration step. The current research on sorption-enhanced production of low-carbon monoxide hydrogen is an extension of previous research in this laboratory that proved the feasibility of producing 95+% hydrogen (dry basis), but without concern for the carbon monoxide concentration. This paper describes sorption-enhanced reaction conditions – temperature, feed gas composition, and volumetric feed rate – required to produce 95+% hydrogen containing low carbon monoxide concentrations suitable for direct use in, for example, a proton exchange membrane fuel cell.

Recommended Citation

Harrison, Douglas P. and Peng, Zhiyong (2003) "Low-Carbon Monoxide Hydrogen by Sorption-Enhanced Reaction," International Journal of Chemical Reactor Engineering: Vol. 1: A37.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/ijcre/vol1/A37

 
 
 
 

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