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Electrified methane reforming: A compact approach to greener industrial hydrogen production
Author(s) -
Sebastian T. Wismann,
Jakob S. Engbæk,
Søren B. Vendelbo,
Flemming Buus Bendixen,
Winnie L. Eriksen,
Kim AasbergPetersen,
Cathrine Frandsen,
Ib Chorkendorff,
Peter Mortensen
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.aaw8775
Subject(s) - steam reforming , hydrogen production , methane , methane reformer , electrification , process engineering , hydrogen , environmental science , catalysis , production (economics) , reactor design , nuclear engineering , scale (ratio) , waste management , chemistry , engineering , electricity , electrical engineering , physics , biochemistry , macroeconomics , quantum mechanics , organic chemistry , economics
Electrification of conventionally fired chemical reactors has the potential to reduce CO 2 emissions and provide flexible and compact heat generation. Here, we describe a disruptive approach to a fundamental process by integrating an electrically heated catalytic structure directly into a steam-methane-reforming (SMR) reactor for hydrogen production. Intimate contact between the electric heat source and the reaction site drives the reaction close to thermal equilibrium, increases catalyst utilization, and limits unwanted byproduct formation. The integrated design with small characteristic length scales allows compact reactor designs, potentially 100 times smaller than current reformer platforms. Electrification of SMR offers a strong platform for new reactor design, scale, and implementation opportunities. Implemented on a global scale, this could correspond to a reduction of nearly 1% of all CO 2 emissions.

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