1. Introduction
Most of the world countries have pledged, firstly in the Kyoto protocol and subsequently in the Paris agreement, to reduce their emissions of greenhouse gasses. In the European Union (EU) the target for the final renewable energy consumption ratio is set to 32% by 2030 [
1]. Renewable electricity generation, mainly from wind and solar energy, will play a relevant role in reaching this target [
2]. As the adoption of renewable energy sources (RES) for electricity generation rises, the intrinsic fluctuating generation characteristic is introduced in the electric network [
3]. This will have a strong impact on the management of the electric grid as it operates on a demand/offer basis and has a limited storage capacity (mainly as pumped hydroelectric storage). Therefore, energy storage will be vital for a reliable and robust electric system with high RES penetration.
One of the most promising solutions for long term energy storage is the Power to Gas (PtG) technology. In this concept, electricity is converted into hydrogen through water electrolysis. The obtained hydrogen could be stored or injected into the natural gas grid [
4]. However, injection into the natural gas grid is limited or not permitted in some grids due to both lower volumetric energy density of hydrogen and steel embrittlement caused by hydrogen [
5,
6]. Therefore, a second conversion stage can be added to combine hydrogen with carbon dioxide to obtain methane. Carbon dioxide can be sourced from high concentration flue gas streams from industry, biogas to biomethane upgrade plants, ethanol production plants. The product is a methane-rich gas that has similar proprieties as natural gas. Therefore, it is a substitute natural gas (SNG) and it can be used in the same applications of natural gas exploiting the existing infrastructure. Furthermore, SNG can be used for the difficult-to-decarbonize sectors (i.e. heavy truck freight transport and ship transport). So far, many pilot-scale plants were built to demonstrate the validity of the PtG technology [
7]. Among these, the Store&GO European project demonstrates the feasibility of three methanation plant concepts: honeycomb methanation reactors, milli-structured methanation reactors and biological methanation [
8]. This work was performed within the Italian demo plant that uses the milli-structured reactor design and has a power input of 200 kW
el, corresponding to methane productivity of 10 Nm
3/h. The product gas can be injected in the natural gas grid or it can be eventually liquified onsite, thus being a PtG as well as PtLNG innovative installation. The process configuration can be found in [
9].
At the heart of the PtG process is the CO
2 methanation reaction also known as the Sabatier reaction reported in Equation (1).
According to Le Chatelier’s principle, the methanation reaction is favored at low temperature and high pressure. Therefore, in order to obtain high conversion rates, a catalyst is required to overcome kinetic limitations occurring at low temperatures. Several transition metals have demonstrated activity for the CO
2 methanation reaction [
10,
11]. The most studied catalysts for this application are nickel-based catalysts due to their good activity and low price [
12]. Very few studies investigate the stability of the catalyst in real operating conditions: Bartholomew et al. [
13,
14] have studied the metallic surface area loss in hydrogen and hydrogen/water atmosphere. They have found that loss of nickel surface area is caused by support collapse and nickel particle growth. Sehested et al. [
15,
16] have performed a similar study for steam reforming nickel supported catalysts. None of these studies supplied operando CO
2 methanation performance. Rostrup-Nielsen et al. [
17] have studied the sintering of a commercial nickel-based catalyst for methanation of CO at high temperatures (600–700 °C). The study was conducted on catalyst samples from a pilot plant that operated for over 8000 h long tests. Abellò et al. [
18] have performed long term tests (500 h) and up to 500 °C on highly loaded nickel catalysts. They found that the catalyst maintains its activity and selectivity with little nickel particle growth. Koschany et al. [
19] observed a strong deactivation on a co-precipitated nickel catalyst in a 320 h long test carried out at 380 °C. They have also reported a correlation between the particle average size and the weight time yield. Furthermore, they did not observe any correlation with the BET surface area. A recent study by Ewald et al. [
20] has analyzed with great detail the cause of methanation nickel-based catalysts between 300 and 350 °C and in tests up to 168 h long. They have found that sintering of the of nickel particles is the main cause of deactivation for co-precipitated samples. For the impregnated samples both the surface area and nickel particle growth were the main cause of deactivation. They have also fitted activity data with a power law model in isothermal conditions. None of the above studies have provided a complete methanation kinetic model containing both the intrinsic kinetic model and the aging behavior. This is a crucial aspect in order to be able to correctly design a reliable methanation reactor system.
In this work, the aging behavior of a commercial Ni/Al2O3 catalyst is examined in real-world operating conditions. Furthermore, the cause of the aging process is investigated using different analytical techniques: N2 physisorption, X-ray diffractometry (XRD) and temperature-programmed oxidation (TPO). Finally, a kinetic model that considers also the aging kinetics is proposed.
3. Materials and Methods
The study was performed in two steps. In the first step, an experimental campaign was carried out in order to determine how the methanation catalyst ages. The experimental conditions were chosen to reflect the operating conditions that the catalyst may encounter in a methanation reactor. After the aging tests, the catalyst samples were characterized by different analytical techniques in order to determine the aging mechanism. In the second step, an experimental campaign was aimed at gathering catalyst activity data necessary for the regression of the intrinsic kinetic model parameters. As a result, an aging kinetic equation was determined thus obtaining a combined kinetic and aging model.
3.1. Experimental
Both catalytic activity and catalyst aging experiments were carried out on a newly designed test unit allowing operations up to 500 °C and 30 bar (
Figure 12). All the involved gases come from pure gas cylinders provided by S.I.A.D. SpA (Bergamo, Italy) with the following purities: H
2 (4.5), CO
2 (4.0), CH
4 (4.5) and N
2 (6.0). The individual gases are mixed in the correct proportion using for each gas a dedicated mass flow controller. A 4-way valve system allows for the feed mixture to be analyzed before switching it to the reactor. The reactor is made of a stainless-steel tube with an inner diameter of 8 mm. Inside the reactor, a 1/8-inch thermocouple well is placed that allows the reaction temperature to be measured along the axis of the fixed bed by moving the thermocouple. The reactor is heated by an electrical heating jacket controlled using a thermocouple placed on the reactor outer wall. The product gas coming out of the reactor is cooled to room temperature and water is condensed and collected inside a tank. The pressure inside the unit is maintained to the setpoint by a back-pressure controller; moreover, two more pressure transducers are used to monitor the pressure at reactor inlet and outlet. Many different safety valves are placed on the gas lines in order to guarantee safe operation. The gases are analyzed using a multi-channel Emerson X-Stream gas analyzer (Emerson Automation Solutions, Milan, Italy) equipped with non-dispersive infrared (NDIR) sensors for CO, CO
2 and CH
4 and a thermal conductivity (TCD) detector for H
2 measurements. Each measurement channel was calibrated (‘zero’ and ‘span’ calibration) using certified bottled gas mixtures. An optional Agilent 7890B (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA) gas chromatograph was used to identify possible reaction by-products. The GC is equipped with an HP-PLOT/Q column (30 m length, 530 µm diameter and 40 µm film thickness) and an HP-PLOT Molesieve column (30 m length, 530 µm diameter and 50 µm film thickness) connected in series. A TCD and a flame ionization detector (FID), also connected in series, complete the GC setup.
The tests were performed on a commercial Ni/Al
2O
3 based catalyst with a nickel loading that ranges between 14–17 wt. %. The proprieties of the catalyst are summarized in
Table 8 [
30,
31].
The catalyst is pre-reduced by the manufacturer for a quicker reaction start-up and to allow a lower activation temperature procedure. Before the tests, the catalyst samples were activated in situ at 260 °C for 5 h with a 30% H
2 in N
2 gas flow. The aging tests were performed on 200 mg unaltered catalyst samples in order to have the closest representation of the behavior of the catalyst inside the real reactor. Two feed compositions were tested during the aging experiments: in the first case (Test 1), a CO
2/H
2/N
2 = 16/64/20 gas mixture is fed to the reactor; while, in the second case (Test 2), a 59.2% H
2, 14.8% CO
2, 6% of methane and 20% N
2 was used. These two compositions were identified through the process modeling of a methanation line with gas separation and recycling, within the concept of the above mentioned Store&GO plant, whose process simulations and results are reported in [
9]. The test matrix is summarized in
Table 9. Both temperature and product gas composition were logged during the whole test length at regular time intervals.
Three catalyst characterization techniques were used in order to determine the cause of catalyst aging. The first technique involved the measurement of specific surface area, pore volume and mean pore diameter using N
2 adsorption isotherms. The measurements were carried out using a TriStar II 3020 from Micromeritics (Norcross, GA, USA). Prior to the measurements, the samples were degassed at 200 °C under nitrogen flow for two hours. The specific surface area was determined by fitting the Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) equation to the N
2 adsorption isotherms [
32]. The regression was performed for values of relative pressure (p/p
0) between 0.05 and 0.35. The pore size distribution was determined using the Barrett-Joyner-Halenda (BJH) method [
33].
The second technique was an X-ray diffraction analysis using Cu Kα radiation (X’Pert Philips PW3040 diffractometer (Almelo, Netherlands), 2
θ range = 10–90°, step size = 0.013°, counting time at 0.2 s/step). Prior to the analysis, the samples had to be crushed in order to obtain a powder. The XRD patterns were compared with reference patterns from the Powder Diffraction Files by the International Centre of Diffraction Data (ICDD) database. Carbon deposition is thermodynamically unfavoured in the testing conditions [
9,
34]. However, absorbed carbon species could form as reaction intermediates. This could lead to carbon deposition caused by a difference in generation and consumption rates. Therefore, temperature-programmed oxidation (TPO) was performed on 100 mg of aged catalyst samples. The catalyst samples were placed in a U tube quartz reactor and degassed from adsorbed CO
2 at 400 °C for 30 minutes under nitrogen flow (see Appendix for CO
2-TPD). Afterward, the samples were cooled down to ambient temperature. The combustion was performed by feeding the reactor with 200 ml/min of gas containing 2% of O
2 in nitrogen and with a heating rate of 10°C/min ramp up to 800 °C. The outlet gas composition was monitored with the same Emerson X-Stream 5 channel gas analyzer. The TPO procedure is also presented in the supporting information (
Figure S-5).
The activity tests used for the intrinsic kinetic model parameter regression were performed on 75 mg catalyst samples. In order to further reduce the risk of being in a diffusional controlled regime, instead of kinetic controlled one, the catalyst sample was crushed and sieved to obtain a granulometry between 106 and 212 μm. For fluid dynamic reasons, the catalyst was diluted in a 1 to 5 ratio with silicon carbide. Prior to the kinetic measurements, the catalyst was stabilized over one night by keeping it on stream at the maximum operating temperature of the kinetic tests. The test matrix is summarized in
Table 10.
3.2. Kinetic Modelling
Different kinetic expressions were fitted to the experimental data. Since the amount of CO measured during the experimental campaign is not negligible, the kinetic model must account for its formation. The same approach was used for the derivation of the kinetic model is found in the literature [
19,
26,
35].
3.2.1. Power-Law Model
A system of two power-laws describing the CO
2 methanation and reverse water gas shift reported in Equation (10) and Equation (11), respectively, was the starting point of the kinetic study.
The kinetic constants are expressed as Arrhenius type:
In order to reduce the correlation between the preexponential factor and the activation energy during the fitting procedure, Equation (12) was reparametrized as stated in Equation (13):
The equilibrium constants were evaluated using thermodynamic data from the NIST Chemistry WebBook [
36]. The constants are evaluated using Equation (14).
The number of parameters that must be estimated for each power law equation is four: the preexponential factor and the activation energy in the Arrhenius term and the two orders of reaction for CO2 and H2.
3.2.2. Langmuir-Hinshelwood-Hougen-Watson (LHHW) Models
The LHHW models were derived from the two mechanisms proposed in the literature and summarized in
Table 11. Both mechanisms have in common many elementary steps, but the conversion of CO is different. On the one hand, in the mechanism a, the adsorbed CO species are hydrogenated in step 4.a to form carbon-hydroxyl COH or formyl HCO intermediates. Afterward, the oxygen gets removed from these intermediates in step 5.a and further hydrogenated to methane in step 6.a. On the other hand, in mechanism b the adsorbed CO is converted in adsorbed carbon in step 4.b and further hydrogenated to methane. Both these mechanisms were successfully used to formulate rate equations that described the CO
2 methanation [
19,
26,
35].
The general form of LHHW rate equations have the form reported in Equation (15):
where k is the kinetic term and depends on the rate-determining step, DF is the driving force and represents the distance from the thermodynamic equilibrium, AD is the adsorption group that depends on the most abundant surface intermediates and the exponent n is an integer. The rate equations were derived using the same approach found in [
37].
3.3. Computational Method
An ideal plug flow reactor model was used to integrate the kinetic model. The mass balance is represented through the system of differential equations, as summarized in Equation (16).
where
is the mole flow rate of species i, m is the mass of catalyst, ν
i is the stoichiometric coefficient of the component in reaction j, and R
j is the reaction of the key component j. By solving the mass balance, the methane and carbon monoxide yields can be calculated using Equation (17) and Equation (18).
The regression was performed by minimizing the sum of squared residuals of the methane and CO yields represented in Equation (19).
The parameter estimation procedure was carried out using MATLAB with the Statistics and Machine Learning Toolbox™. The procedure involved firstly the use of the genetic algorithm for an initial estimation of the model parameters and successively the use of the nonlinear fitting routines for the final minimization.
Local sensitivity analysis was performed in order to evaluate the behavior of the objective function near the determined minima and to investigate the sensitivity of the model to the single parameters. The sensitivity analysis was evaluated by perturbating one parameter at a time in a ± 25% range from the optimum value. For every perturbation of the parameter values, the objective function was re-evaluated.
3.4. Aging Modelling
The normalized activity (a) is defined as the ratio between the reaction rate at time t (r) and the initial reaction rate (r
0) [
28,
38]. The loss of activity during a sintering process can be correlated with the loss of normalized surface area or dispersion of the active phase with a proportionality, as reported in Equation (20) [
28].
where S is the surface area of the active phase at time t, S
0 is the initial surface area, D is the dispersion at time t, D
0 is the initial dispersion and p is a real positive exponent. The sintering rate can be expressed using a power-law expression (21).
where
is the sintering kinetic constant that can be expressed using an Arrhenius like term with a preexponential factor and an activation energy (13).
4. Conclusions
The aging evolution of a nickel-based catalyst for CO2 methanation was investigated at different temperatures and two in feed compositions during 100 h long tests. At low temperature, no activity loss was observed, while at a higher temperature the performance of the catalyst degraded up to a 7% drop in methane yield for the 500 °C test. The aging effect was attributed to a decrease in total surface area of the aged samples and consequently of the exposed active nickel surface. Furthermore, for one of the aged samples a direct correlation was found between the ratio of the preexponential factors of the fresh and aged sample and the ratio of the BET surface of the aged and fresh sample.
The reaction rates of CO2 methanation and RWGS were determined for the fresh catalyst (being careful to limit the deactivation during kinetic measurements). An LHHW kinetic model was used to fit the activity data and the parameters were estimated. Finally, power-law aging kinetics was determined for the catalyst. This gives a complete description of the catalyst behavior both in terms of operating conditions and time on stream. The complete kinetic model can be used to simulate the behavior and performance of this catalyst in an industrial reactor.