Green Synthetic Fuels: Renewable Routes for the Conversion of Non-Fossil Feedstocks into Gaseous Fuels and Their End Uses
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Background
1.2. Motivation of This Work
2. Heat-to-Gas Routes
2.1. Solar Water Thermolysis
- Microporous ceramic membranes made of refractory materials in sub-atmospheric pressure reactors that allow selective separation of a species [73].
- Membranes semipermeable to oxygen made by a high temperature solid electrolyte material (ZrO2, CaO, CeO2, Y2O3, perovskite) placed in a chemical potential gradient. The mixed ionic and electronic conducting (MIEC) membranes are realized with refractory oxides with a mixed type of electrical conductivity with ionic and electronic components. In the presence of a gradient of oxygen pressure, a chemical potential induces migration of oxygen ions across the membrane, and an electron current circulates in the opposite direction due to electronic conductivity of the material [74].
- A rotating cylindrical vessel in which the gas mixture could pass through. The centrifugal field of force modifies the equilibrium pressure of species, separating them [76].
- Supersonic jets generated by expanding a gas mixture rich of dense gases near the jet axis and with lighter gases on the external part. This distribution leads to beam deflection and gas separation due to centrifuge forces in the curved flow [77].
2.2. Thermochemical Cycles
2.2.1. Reactors
2.2.2. Technology Readiness Level
3. Power-to-Gas Routes
3.1. Electrolysis
3.1.1. Alkaline Electrolysis Cells
3.1.2. Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Electrolysis Cells
3.1.3. High-Temperature Electrolysis Cells
3.1.4. Microbial Electrolysis Cells
3.2. Photoelectrochemical Cell
3.2.1. Photocatalysts
- A broad spectral range for light absorption (the bandgap range should spread between 1.8 and 2.2 eV);
- Proper valence and conduction band energy level in function of the redox potential of water splitting;
- Effective electron–hole pairs separation;
- Effective charge and mass transport and long carrier diffusion length;
- High chemical, electrochemical and photoelectrochemical stability;
- Low cost and environmentally friendly.
3.2.2. Modification Techniques
3.3. Technology Readiness Level
3.3.1. Electrolysis
Alkaline Electrolysis
Proton Exchange Membrane Electrolysis Cells
Solid Oxide Electrolysis Cells
Microbial Electrolysis Cells
3.3.2. Photoelectrochemical Cells
4. Bio-to-Gas Routes
- Feedstock pre-treatment
- Pyrolysis
- Char gasification
- Syngas clean up.
4.1. Feedstock Pre-Treatment
4.2. Pyrolysis
4.2.1. Pyrolysis Process
4.2.2. Pyrolysis Reactors
4.3. Gasification
4.3.1. Gasification Process
4.3.2. Design of Gasifiers
- fixed-bed (or packed-bed) gasifiers;
- fluidized-bed gasifiers;
- entrained-flow gasifiers.
4.4. Syngas Clean Up
- Primary products: cellulose-derived products (levoglucosan, furfurals, hydroxy-acetaldehyde), hemicellulose-derived products and lignin-derived methoxyphenols;
- Secondary products: phenolics and olefins;
- Tertiary products: methyl derivates, toluene and indene;
- Condensed tertiary products: polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (benzene, naphthalene, pyrene, anthracene, acenaphthylene).
4.5. Technology Readiness Level
4.6. Catalytic Methanation
4.6.1. Reactors
4.6.2. Technology Readiness Level
5. Green Synthetic Fuels Supply Chain
5.1. Gas Quality and Interchangeability
5.2. Gas Network Injection
5.3. Combustion
5.4. Fuel Cells Gas Quality
5.5. Storage
5.5.1. Compressed Gas Storage
Natural Gas
Hydrogen
5.5.2. Liquefied Gas Storage
Natural Gas
Hydrogen
5.5.3. Gas Solid Storage
Natural Gas
Hydrogen
5.5.4. Underground Gas Storage
Natural Gas
Hydrogen
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Parameter | Unit | Value |
---|---|---|
Wobbe index | MJ/m3 | 48.96 ÷ 56.92 |
Relative density | m3/m3 | 0.555 ÷ 0.700 |
Total sulfur | mg/m3 | 30 |
H2S and COS | mg/m3 | 5 |
RSH | mg/m3 | 6 |
O2 | mol % | 0.001 |
CO2 | mol % | 2.5 |
Water dew point | °C at 70 bar | −8 |
Hydrocarbon dew point | °C at 1–70 bar | −2 |
Parameter | CH4 | H2 |
---|---|---|
Higher heating value [MJ/m3] | 39.82 | 12.75 |
Relative density [m3/m3] | 0.5548 | 0.0695 |
Wobbe index [MJ/m3] | 53.54 | 48.37 |
Stoichiometric air requirement [mol/mol] | 9.55 | 2.39 |
Laminar flame velocity [cm/s] | 36.7 | 275 |
Adiabatic flame temperature [K] | 1950 | 2210 |
Flammability limits in air by volume [%] | 5.3 ÷ 15 | 4.1 ÷ 74 |
Diffusion coefficient [cm2/s] | 0.21 | 0.63 |
TRL | TRL Description | Energy Conversion Efficiency [%] | Production Cost [$/kgfuel] | CO2 Emission [kgCO2/kgfuel] | Note | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Biomass gasification | Air | 4–9 |
| 45–60 (cold gas efficiency of energy conversion to syngas) [757] | 1.17 (2000 dry tons/day plant using forest residues)–1.33 (2000 dry tons/day plant, straw-based biohydrogen) [758] | 1.10–1.61 [758] | |||
Steam | 60–70 [759,760] | ||||||||
Oxygen | 65–80 [528,761] | ||||||||
Thermolysis | 1–3 | Laboratory scale | 10 [68] | 7.98–8.40 [34] | - | No pilot plant, more attention for two-step thermochemical cycles | |||
Two-step Thermochemical cycle (ZnO/Zn) | 4–7 |
| 17(CY 2015 case assuming 70% ZnO dissociation and heliostats cost of 126.5$/m2)–21 (CY 2025 case assuming 85% ZnO dissociation and heliostat cost of 90$/m2) [762] | 6.07–4.18 [763] | - | Further research on reactor materials, quenching of products, separation of reactants and solar concentration technologies | |||
Three-step thermochemical cycle (S–I) | 19 [149] | 5.01–4.68 [763] | - | ||||||
Photoelectrochemical (PEC) cell | 1–4 | Scale-up of PEC reactors | 3–5 (solar to fuel efficiency demonstrated in single-junction devices based on low cost thin-film materials)12–16 (solar to fuel efficiency demonstrated in tandem devices based on high-quality crystalline semiconductors) [441] | 11.4 [315,764] | - | Pilot plants planned for next few year | |||
Electrolysis | PV | Wind | PV | Wind | |||||
Alkaline electrolyzer | 7–9 |
| 10–12 | 20–24 (photovoltaic efficiency of 20% and the wind power efficiency of 40% multiplied for the electrolyzer efficiency: AEC 50%–60%, PEMEC 55%–70%, SOEC 40%–60%, MEC 78% [178]) | 1.8 (forecasted production cost of hydrogen in 2050 through water electrolysis using electricity from PV or offshore wind)–4.3 (hydrogen production cost in 2020 through water electrolysis using electricity from PV or offshore wind) [765] | 3–6.7 [765] | - | Three planned first-of-a-kind commercial demonstration plants (10-20-700 MWel) | |
PEM electrolyzer | 4–8 |
| 11–14 | 22–28 | - | Three planned first-of-a-kind commercial demonstration plants | |||
Solid oxide electrolyzer | 3–5 |
| 8–12 | 16–24 | - | Planned the first commercial plant (20 MWel) | |||
Microbial electrolyzer | 1–4 |
| 15.5 | 31 | 11.5 (NREL TEA calculation assuming 90% hydrolysis efficiency) [766] | Pilot plants are mostly fed by domestic wastewater | |||
CO/CO2 methanation | 5–7 |
| 74–82 [606] | 2.83–4.17 [767] | - (No CO2 emissions if the CO2 conversion efficiency is 100%) | Two planned demonstration plants of 10 MW (MeGa-StoRE project) |
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Rozzi, E.; Minuto, F.D.; Lanzini, A.; Leone, P. Green Synthetic Fuels: Renewable Routes for the Conversion of Non-Fossil Feedstocks into Gaseous Fuels and Their End Uses. Energies 2020, 13, 420. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13020420
Rozzi E, Minuto FD, Lanzini A, Leone P. Green Synthetic Fuels: Renewable Routes for the Conversion of Non-Fossil Feedstocks into Gaseous Fuels and Their End Uses. Energies. 2020; 13(2):420. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13020420
Chicago/Turabian StyleRozzi, Elena, Francesco Demetrio Minuto, Andrea Lanzini, and Pierluigi Leone. 2020. "Green Synthetic Fuels: Renewable Routes for the Conversion of Non-Fossil Feedstocks into Gaseous Fuels and Their End Uses" Energies 13, no. 2: 420. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13020420
APA StyleRozzi, E., Minuto, F. D., Lanzini, A., & Leone, P. (2020). Green Synthetic Fuels: Renewable Routes for the Conversion of Non-Fossil Feedstocks into Gaseous Fuels and Their End Uses. Energies, 13(2), 420. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13020420