4.7 Article

Process simulation and economic analysis of the Calcium Looping Process (CLP) for hydrogen and electricity production from coal and natural gas

期刊

FUEL
卷 105, 期 -, 页码 383-396

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2012.07.006

关键词

CO2 capture; Calcium sorbent; Hydrogen; Coal gasification; Steam methane reforming

资金

  1. National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
  2. Ohio Coal Development Office (OCDO) of the Ohio Department of Development (ODOD)
  3. U.S. DOE [DE-FC26-07NT43059]

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The Calcium Looping Process (CLP) is being developed to facilitate carbon dioxide (CO2) capture during the production of hydrogen (H-2) from syngas. The process integrates CO2, sulfur, and halide removal with the water-gas shift (WGS) reaction in a single-stage reactor. In the CLP, a regenerable calcium oxide (CaO) sorbent is used to chemically react with and remove CO2 and other acid gases from syngas at high temperature (i.e., 550-700 degrees C). The removal of CO2 drives the WGS reaction forward via Le Chatelier's principle, obviating the need for a WGS catalyst and enabling the production of high-purity H-2. The spent sorbent is heated in a calciner to regenerate CaO for reuse in the process and to release a concentrated CO2 stream, which can be dried and sequestered. The regenerated sorbent is then reactivated in a hydrator, to improve its recyclability, before being reintroduced into the H-2 production reactor. Techno-economic analyses were performed to evaluate the application of the CLP to a coal-to-H-2 plant, a steam methane reforming (SMR) plant, and an integrated gasification-combined cycle (IGCC) plant, all including >= 90% CO2 capture. In each case, use of the CLP resulted in a 9-12% reduction in the cost of H-2 or cost of electricity when compared with the use of conventional CO2 capture and WGS technologies. The economic advantage afforded by the CLP is realized because of the large amount of high-quality heat produced in the process, which is recovered to raise steam for electricity generation. This heat arises from the combustion of supplemental fuel in the CLP calciner and from the exothermic CO2 removal, WGS, and hydration reactions, which are carried out at high temperature (i.e., >= 500 degrees C) in the CLP. As a result of recovering this heat, the CLP-based coal-to-H-2 and SMR plants, which are designed to produce 26,000 kg/h H-2, necessarily co-produce 320 MWe and 190 MWe of net electric power, respectively. Although the CLP can reduce the cost of producing H-2 from coal, the resulting cost is still about 26% greater than the cost of H-2 produced from natural gas using conventional WGS and CO2 capture technologies, assuming coal and natural gas prices of $1.55/GJ and $6.21/GJ, respectively. The lowest cost of H-2 with CO2 capture for these fuel prices is achieved by applying the CLP to an SMR plant. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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