Techno-economic assessment of CO2 capture at steam methane reforming facilities using commercially available technology

J.C. Meerman, E.S. Hamborg, T. van Keulen, C.A. Ramirez, W.C. Turkenburg, A.P.C. Faaij

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This study aimed to identify the optimal techno-economic configuration of CO2 capture at steam methane reforming facilities using currently available technologies by means of process simulations. Results indicate that the optimal system is CO2 capture with ADIP-X located between the water–gas shift and pressure swing adsorption units. Process simulations of this system configuration showed a CO2 emission reduction of 60% at 41 €/t CO2 avoidance. This is at the lower end of the range reported in open literature for CO2 capture at refineries (26–82 €/t CO2) and below the avoidance costs for CO2 capture at natural gas-fired power plants (44–93 €/t CO2). CO2 avoidance costs are dominated by the natural gas consumption, responsible for up to 66% of total costs. Using imported steam and electricity can reduce CO2 avoidance costs by 45%. Addition of small amounts of piperazine to aqueous MDEA solutions results in up to 70% smaller absorbers or 10% lower reboiler heat duty. Optimising the whole capture process instead of individual units resulted in lower piperazine concentrations than the common industrial practice (3 mass% vs. 5 mass%). Finally, keeping the solvent rate constant when operating the capture unit below its design load resulted in a lower specific energy for CO2 capture than when the solvent rate was downscaled with the syngas flow.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)160-171
Number of pages12
JournalInternational Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control
Volume9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2012

Bibliographical note

CIER-E-2012-115

Keywords

  • Steam methane reforming
  • CO2 capture
  • H2-production
  • Techno-economic
  • ADIP-X

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