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A highly carbon‐efficient and techno‐economically optimized process for the renewable‐assisted synthesis of gas to liquid fuels, ammonia, and urea products
Author(s) -
Ziaei Mohammad,
Panahi Mehdi,
Fanaei Mohammad Ali,
Rafiee Ahmad,
Khalilpour Kaveh
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of energy research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.808
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 1099-114X
pISSN - 0363-907X
DOI - 10.1002/er.6886
Subject(s) - process integration , process engineering , ammonia production , waste management , ammonia , chemistry , environmental science , engineering , organic chemistry
Summary Carbon dioxide conversion into beneficial products has received very much attention in recent years to decrease industrial CO 2 emissions. In this context, integration of gas to liquids (GTL) process with an iron‐based Fischer‐Tropsch (FT) reactor with ammonia and urea synthesis plants was investigated. The main motivation of the proposed integration is to reuse a released CO 2 stream from the GTL process and to enhance the commercial process economy. The required hydrogen for ammonia comes from polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) electrolyzers running by solar power. Latin hypercube design (LHD) approach was applied to model the profitability and carbon efficiency of the process. Optimization was conducted to maximize the carbon efficiency and profit index of the overall process using the model‐based calibration (MBC) toolbox of MATLAB. The results demonstrated that at the optimum case, the proposed integration is capable of producing 48 t/h of urea and also utilizing about 35 t/h of CO 2 produced in the GTL process. The results were compared with another configuration in which a cobalt‐based FT reactor was integrated with ammonia and urea processes. The results suggest that profitability, carbon efficiency, and urea production of the process configuration with a Co‐based FT reactor is higher than the iron‐based configuration while the wax production rate of the iron‐based configuration is higher than that of the Co‐based process. Techno‐economic feasibility study of the zero CO 2 emission process represents that the carbon efficiency of around 100% could be obtained.