Catalytic reactor engineering ⇒ information-driven design of packed (operando), fluidized, multi-functional, and -phase reactors

Problem statement

At lab-scale, the ultimate goal of a catalytic reactor is to provide (1) reliable kinetic information, neglecting or controlling other phenomena (heat-mass transfer and hydrodynamics); (2) high-throughput data to amplify the results, accelerate model and catalyst discoveries; and (3) results with the minimum requirements of reactants and wastes generated. The pillars of these reactors are quality, quantity, and safety.

We design, build and test different laboratory-scale reactors. Our strategy involves creating and testing reactor prototypes while modeling these using our workflow. We have high-speed cameras, probes, and other measuring instruments to understand the reactor behavior. We focus on packed-, fluidized-bed, and multiphase reactors:

In packed bed reactors, we focus on forced dynamic and operando reactors. These are the quintessence of information-driven reactors where the dynamics can involve flow changes, temperature, pressure, partial pressure, presence of activity modifiers (poissons, H2O…). In operando reactors, we follow a spectro-kinetic-deactivation-hydrodynamic approach to resolve the individual steps involved. In fluidized bed reactors, we focus on downers and multifunctional reactors (circulating, multizone or two-zone, Berty reactors) We focus on trickle-bed, slurry, and bio-electrochemical reactors in multiphase bed reactors.

Al pilot-plant scale, we aim to reach the maximum productivity levels while solving the growing pains: the scale-up. Based on a robust kinetic model obtained in the intrinsic kinetic reactor (lab-scale) and using computational fluid dynamics, we design, build, and operate pilot plants. At this stage, we seek partnerships with investment or industrial enterprises to make these pilot plants.

Goals

  • Multifunctional fluidized bed reactors ⇒ multizone, circulating...
  • Packed bed membrane reactors
  • Forced dynamic reactors ⇒ pulsing, SSITKA...
  • Forced dynamic operando reactors ⇒ DRIFTS, TPSR...
  • Operando reactors
  • Spray fluidized bed reactors
  • Downer reactor I ⇒ micro downer
  • Downer reactor II ⇒ counter-current and scale-up
  • Batch Berty reactor ⇒ short contact time
  • Multiphase reactors ⇒ trickle bed and slurry
  • High throughput experimentation (HTE) reactors
  • Photo-thermal and bioreactors
  • Reactor visualization and prototyping lab
  • Spatio-temporal hydrodynamic characterization and validation

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Related Publications

High purity, self-sustained, pressurized hydrogen production from ammonia in a catalytic membrane reactor

by Cerrillo, Morlanes, Kulkarni, Realpe, Ramirez, Katikaneni, Paglieri, Lee, Harale, Solami, Jamal, Sarathy, Castaño, Gascon
Chem. Eng. J. Year: 2022 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2021.134310

Abstract

The combination of catalytic decomposition of ammonia and in situ separation of hydrogen holds great promise for the use of ammonia as a clean energy carrier. However, finding the optimal catalyst – membrane pair and operation conditions have proved challenging. Here, we demonstrate that cobalt-based catalysts for ammonia decomposition can be efficiently used together with a Pd-Au based membrane to produce high purity hydrogen at elevated pressure. Compared to a conventional packed bed reactor, the membrane reactor offers several operational advantages that result in energetic and economic benefits. The robustness and durability of the combined system has been demonstrated for>1000 h on stream, yielding a very pure hydrogen stream (>99.97 % H2) and recovery (>90 %). When considering the required hydrogen compression for storage/utilization and environmental issues, the combined system offers the additional advantage of production of hydrogen at moderate pressures along with full ammonia conversion. Altogether, our results demonstrate the possibility of deploying high pressure (350 bar) hydrogen generators from ammonia with H2 efficiencies of circa 75% without any external energy input and/or derived CO2 emissions.

Keywords

AMD MKM CRE