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High-purity hydrogen via the sorption-enhanced steam methane reforming reaction over a synthetic CaO-based sorbent and a Ni catalyst.

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TLDR
The favorable CO2 capture characteristics of the synthetic CO2 sorbent were attributed to the uniform dispersion of CaO on a stable nanosized mayenite framework, thus retarding thermal sintering of the material.
Abstract
Sorbent-enhanced steam methane reforming (SE-SMR) is an emerging technology for the production of high-purity hydrogen from hydrocarbons with in situ CO2 capture. Here, SE-SMR was studied using a mixture containing a Ni-hydrotalcite-derived catalyst and a synthetic, Ca-based, calcium aluminate supported CO2 sorbent. The fresh and cycled materials were characterized using N2 physisorption, X-ray diffraction, and scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The combination of a Ni-hydrotalcite catalyst and the synthetic CO2 sorbent produced a stream of high-purity hydrogen, that is, 99 vol % (H2O- and N2-free basis). The CaO conversion of the synthetic CO2 sorbent was 0.58 mol CO2/mol CaO after 10 cycles, which was more than double the value achieved by limestone. The favorable CO2 capture characteristics of the synthetic CO2 sorbent were attributed to the uniform dispersion of CaO on a stable nanosized mayenite framework, thus retarding thermal sintering of the material. On the other hand, the cycled limestone lost its nanostructured morphology completely over 10 SE-SMR cycles due to its intrinsic lack of a support component.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical looping beyond combustion – a perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the use of oxygen carriers or redox catalysts for chemical production has been investigated and shown to offer significant opportunities for process intensification and exergy loss minimization.
Journal ArticleDOI

CaO-based CO2 sorbents: from fundamentals to the development of new, highly effective materials.

TL;DR: Current understanding of fundamental aspects of the cyclic carbonation-calcination reactions of CaO such as its reversibility and kinetics are reviewed, and recent attempts to develop synthetic, CaO-based sorbents that possess high and cyclically stable CO2 uptakes are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

High temperature CO2 sorbents and their application for hydrogen production by sorption enhanced steam reforming process

TL;DR: In this article, the main characteristics and preparation methods of CaO-based and alkaline-based sorbents, their advantages and drawbacks, the available techniques to improve their behavior in severe operating conditions, as well as the progress of their application in two important SESR processes, namely, sorption enhanced steam methane reforming (SESMR) and SESGR).
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of developments in pilot-plant testing and modelling of calcium looping process for CO2 capture from power generation systems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of the bench-and pilot-plant test facilities available worldwide, summarising the characteristics and operating conditions of the test facilities, as well as extracting the key experimental findings.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Conversion Limits in the Reaction of CO2 with Lime

TL;DR: The use of calcines of natural limestones as CO2 regenerable sorbents is investigated in this paper by studying the decay of the maximum carbonation conversion during many carbonation/calcination cycles.
Journal ArticleDOI

CO2 Capture Capacity of CaO in Long Series of Carbonation/Calcination Cycles

TL;DR: In this paper, a long series of carbonation/calcination cycles (up to 500) varying different variables affecting sorbent capacity have been tested in a thermogravimetric apparatus.
Journal ArticleDOI

On hydrogen and hydrogen energy strategies. I: current status and needs

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors deal with hydrogen energy as a clean energy carrier, discuss the key role of hydrogen energy technologies and systems, and compare hydrogen with other energy forms, and discuss energy strategies that incorporate hydrogen energy.
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