Decarbonisation Technology August 2022 issue

PPC

FT

H/CO price: 4000/50 $/t

PPC

Carbonation

Carbonation

CH

Urea

CH

FT

Urea

0

Oxo (butanal)

Polyols

0

Polyols

Oxo (butanal)

MeOH

MeOH

Xylenes

Xylenes

H/CO price: 1500/200 $/t

Feed/product value addition Electricity/fuel/steam

H cost

CO revenue

Figure 5 Operating cost/revenue balance – 2030 scenario

Fixed Opex

Figure 4 Operating cost/revenue breakdown – 2050 scenario elements in more detail, as well as the capital cost and technology readiness. Hydrogen consumed The hydrogen utilisation intensity (HUI) heavily depends on the CU technology considered and largely correlates with the destination of the oxygen atoms in the utilised CO₂ molecule. The process of producing oxygen-free products involves separating the oxygen atoms in the CO₂ molecule from the carbon atom, which is done by binding the oxygen with hydrogen and generating water. Hence, hydrogen is not only required to generate hydrocarbon but also to capture the oxygen atoms of the CO₂ into water molecules. The HUI and carbon utilisation intensities (CUI) of the process can be defined as the tonnes of hydrogen and carbon consumed to produce one tonne of product, respectively. Figure 7 is a theoretical hydrogen intensity chart. The x

and y axes are the ratio of the number of oxygen and hydrogen-to-carbon atoms in the product. Acetic acid (CH₃COOH), for example, has an #H/C and #O/C ratio of 2 and 1, respectively. The lines on the graph show lines of equal hydrogen intensity, i.e. lines of equal hydrogen intake for products produced from CO 2 , as a function of the oxygen and hydrogen content of the products. Acetic acid is located close to the line of 0.13 t H2 / t product . Therefore, a green acetic acid facility with a production capacity of 100 t/h of acid out of CO₂ will require just over 13 t/h (~150 kNm 3 /h) of hydrogen. The graph shows that even the production of hydrogen-free carbon from CO₂ requires more than 0.3/t of hydrogen per tonne of product, only to remove the oxygen atoms from CO₂.

5

0.50 t /t product H

Methanol

0.40 t /t H product

4

0.20 t /t H product

Methane

0.30 t /t H product

3

0.15 t /t H product

Mid distillate/FT

PPC

H/CO price: 1500/200 $/t

2

Acetic acid

Butanal

FT

Xylenes

Carbonation

Acrylic acid

1

0.13 t /t H product

CH

Urea

Carbon

0

0

Oxo (butanal)

Xylenes

MeOH

Polyols

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

# O /C ratio in product

Figure 6 Operating cost/revenue balance – 2050 scenario

Figure 7 Theoretical H₂ utilisation intensity for product synthesis for CO₂ and H₂

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