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Evaluating Electrically-Heated Versus Conventionally-Heated Steam Methane Reforming

Abstract

Steam methane reforming (SMR) is the most widely used hydrogen (H2) production method, converting natural gas and steam into H2 and carbon dioxide (CO2). SMR is a mature industrial technology that burns fossil fuels to provide heat to the endothermic reforming reactions and to generate steam, which contributes to the production of greenhouse gas emissions. In order to reduce heating-based emissions, an electrically-heated steam methane reforming process has been proposed. Conventional SMR uses a packed bed catalyst and receives heat through radiation from hot flames in the surrounding furnace; on the other hand, an electrified SMR employs a washcoated catalyst, and is resistively-heated through the wall of the reactor coil. To gain further insight into the scalability of hydrogen production processes using electrically-heated reformers, this thesis takes experimental data from an electrified reformer built at UCLA, extracts kinetic parameters,and uses these parameters to model a hydrogen production plant with a hydrogen production capacity of 253 kg/h (2623 Nm3/h). The simulated plant includes a reformer, two shift reactors, pressure swing adsorption (PSA) for separation, and a heat exchange network to make steam for the reformer. A sensitivity analysis is conducted for the most energy-efficient H2 production conditions (e.g., operating pressure, heat flux), and CO2 production amounts are compared to a conventional SMR process, demonstrating that electrified SMR can potentially be a significantly cleaner alternative.

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