via Inverse
MIT-developed method converts carbon dioxide into useful compounds.
MIT researchers have developed a new system that could potentially be used for converting power plant emissions of carbon dioxide into useful fuels for cars, trucks, and planes, as well as into chemical feedstocks for a wide variety of products.
The new membrane-based system was developed by MIT postdoc Xiao-Yu Wu and Ahmed Ghoniem, the Ronald C. Crane Professor of Mechanical Engineering, and is described in a paper in the journal ChemSusChem. The membrane, made of a compound of lanthanum, calcium, and iron oxide, allows oxygen from a stream of carbon dioxide to migrate through to the other side, leaving carbon monoxide behind. Other compounds, known as mixed ionic electronic conductors, are also under consideration in their lab for use in multiple applications including oxygen and hydrogen production.
Carbon monoxide produced during this process can be used as a fuel by itself or combined with hydrogen and/or water to make many other liquid hydrocarbon fuels as well as chemicals including methanol (used as an automotive fuel), syngas, and so on. Ghoniem’s lab is exploring some of these options. This process could become part of the suite of technologies known as carbon capture, utilization, and storage, or CCUS, which if applied to electicity production could reduce the impact of fossil fuel use on global warming.
The membrane, with a structure known as perovskite, is “100 percent selective for oxygen,” allowing only those atoms to pass, Wu explains. The separation is driven by temperatures of up to 990 degrees Celsius, and the key to making the process work is to keep the oxygen that separates from carbon dioxide flowing through the membrane until it reaches the other side. This could be done by creating a vacuum on side of the membrane opposite the carbon dioxide stream, but that would require a lot of energy to maintain.
In place of a vacuum, the researchers use a stream of fuel such as hydrogen or methane. These materials are so readily oxidized that they will actually draw the oxygen atoms through the membrane without requiring a pressure difference. The membrane also prevents the oxygen from migrating back and recombining with the carbon monoxide, to form carbon dioxide all over again. Ultimately, and depending on the application, a combination of some vaccum and some fuel can be used to reduce the energy required to drive the process and produce a useful product.
The energy input needed to keep the process going, Wu says, is heat, which could be provided by solar energy or by waste heat, some of which could come from the power plant itself and some from other sources. Essentially, the process makes it possible to store that heat in chemical form, for use whenever it’s needed. Chemical energy storage has very high energy density — the amount of energy stored for a given weight of material — as compared to many other storage forms.
At this point, Wu says, he and Ghoniem have demonstrated that the process works. Ongoing research is examining how to increase the oxygen flow rates across the membrane, perhaps by changing the material used to build the membrane, changing the geometry of the surfaces, or adding catalyst materials on the surfaces. The researchers are also working on integrating the membrane into working reactors and coupling the reactor with the fuel production system. They are examining how this method could be scaled up and how it compares to other approaches to capturing and converting carbon dioxide emissions, in terms of both costs and effects on overall power plant operations.
In a natural gas power plant that Ghoniem’s group and others have worked on previously, Wu says the incoming natural gas could be split into two streams, one that would be burned to generate electricity while producing a pure stream of carbon dioxide, while the other stream would go to the fuel side of the new membrane system, providing the oxygen-reacting fuel source. That stream would produce a second output from the plant, a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide known as syngas, which is a widely used industrial fuel and feedstock. The syngas can also be added to the existing natural gas distribution network.
The method may thus not only cut greenhouse emissions; it could also produce another potential revenue stream to help defray its costs.
The process can work with any level of carbon dioxide concentration, Wu says — they have tested it all the way from 2 percent to 99 percent — but the higher the concentration, the more efficient the process is. So, it is well-suited to the concentrated output stream from conventional fossil-fuel-burning power plants or those designed for carbon capture such as oxy-combustion plants.
Learn more: Turning emissions into fuel
The Latest on: Carbon dioxide into fuel
- Carbon Dioxide Fertilization and Biotech Crops Are the Keys to Ending Hungeron April 8, 2021 at 1:40 pm
With the Earth’s population expected to top nine billion between 2050 and 2100 (before starting a rapid decline), this challenge will likely worsen in coming decades unless people embrace increases in ...
- Reducing London's Carbon Emissions with a Green Floating Fuel Stationon April 7, 2021 at 5:15 am
As London continues to move towards a carbon-neutral future, a recent collaborative effort between GPS Marine and Green Biofuels will bring the Dispenser, a new floating biofuel station, to the Thames ...
- Carbon nanospike catalyst splits water, carbon dioxide and recombines atoms into heavier nanocarbonson April 6, 2021 at 4:58 am
researchers have developed an electrocatalyst that enables water and carbon dioxide to be split and the atoms recombined to form higher weight hydrocarbons for gasoline, diesel and jet fuel.
- Copper may be the key to turn CO2 into fuelon April 4, 2021 at 9:19 pm
into chemicals or fuels.In a paper published in the journal Angewandte Chemie, the scientists explain that what they did was optimize already available copper catalysts to improve their ...
- ExxonMobil and Porsche Test Lower-Carbon Fuel in Race Conditionson March 30, 2021 at 9:27 am
Porsche and ExxonMobil’s collaboration will also focus on eFuels, which are synthetic fuels made from hydrogen and captured carbon dioxide ... taking into account the feedstock, production ...
- ExxonMobil and Porsche Test Lower-Carbon Fuel in Race Conditionson March 30, 2021 at 4:59 am
Porsche and ExxonMobil’s collaboration will also focus on eFuels, which are synthetic fuels made from hydrogen and captured carbon dioxide. As early as 2022 ... as a well-to-wheels boundary, taking ...
- A stable copper catalyst for carbon dioxide conversionon March 25, 2021 at 5:00 pm
A new catalyst for the conversion of carbon dioxide (CO 2) into chemicals or fuels has been developed by researchers at Ruhr-Universität Bochum and the University of Duisburg-Essen. They ...
- New generation of carbon dioxide traps could make carbon capture practicalon March 24, 2021 at 1:05 pm
Typically, water that contains amines is sprayed into the top of an exhaust ... Organic solvents promise to capture carbon dioxide (CO 2) from fossil fuel-burning power plants more cheaply than ...
- A Midwest pipeline promises to return carbon dioxide to the groundon March 17, 2021 at 10:30 am
Summit Carbon Solutions, a spinoff of an Iowa-based agricultural company, recently announced it is developing a $2 billion pipeline project that will carry carbon dioxide captured from ethanol ...
- 5 Countries With The Highest Average Carbon Dioxide Emissions Per Personon March 15, 2021 at 2:21 pm
Carbon dioxide emission from fossil fuel per capita in 2019 ... s hedge fund at the beginning of 1957 see his capital turn into $103,000 before fees and $64,100 after fees (this means Warren ...
via Google News and Bing News