Premium
Design and operational considerations of catalytic membrane reactors for ammonia synthesis
Author(s) -
Zhang Zhenyu,
Way J. Douglas,
Wolden Colin A.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
aiche journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.958
H-Index - 167
eISSN - 1547-5905
pISSN - 0001-1541
DOI - 10.1002/aic.17259
Subject(s) - permeance , ammonia , ammonia production , hydrogen , chemistry , catalysis , membrane reactor , membrane , hydrogen production , chemical engineering , power to gas , process engineering , selectivity , waste management , inorganic chemistry , organic chemistry , engineering , biochemistry , electrolysis , electrode , electrolyte
Production of ammonia using hydrogen derived from renewable electricity instead of hydrocarbon reforming would dramatically reduce the carbon footprint of this commodity chemical. Novel technologies such as catalytic membrane reactors (CMRs) may potentially be more compatible with distributed ammonia production than the conventional Haber–Bosch process. A reactor model is developed based on integrating a standard industrial iron catalyst into a CMR equipped with an inorganic membrane that is selective to NH 3 over N 2 /H 2 . CMR performance is studied as functions of wide ranges of membrane properties and operating conditions. Conversion and ammonia recovery are dictated principally by the ammonia permeance, and the benefits by using membranes become significant above 100 GPU = 3.4 × 10 −8 mol m −2 s −1 Pa −1 . To be effective, the CMR requires a minimum selectivity for ammonia of 10 over both nitrogen and hydrogen and purity scales with the effective selectivity. Increasing the pressure of operation significantly improves all metrics, and at P = 30 bar with a quality membrane, ammonia is almost completely recovered, enabling direct recycle of unreacted hydrogen and nitrogen without need for recompression. Temperature drives conversion and scales monotonically without thermodynamic limitations in a CMR. Alternatively, the temperature may be reduced as low as 300°C while achieving conversion levels surpassing equilibrium limits at T = 400°C in a conventional reactor.