(491e) Bi-Reforming of Methane and Natural Gas Under High Pressure | AIChE

(491e) Bi-Reforming of Methane and Natural Gas Under High Pressure



Bi-Reforming of Methane and Natural Gas Under High Pressure

Alain Goeppert, Miklos Czaun, Robert B.
May, G. K. Surya Prakash, George A. Olah, Loker Hydrocarbon Research Institute,
Department of Chemistry, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089,
USA

Introduction

By choosing the right proportions
between water, CO2 and CH4, the combination of steam and
dry reforming of methane can generate syn-gas with a H2/CO ratio of 2
ideal for the synthesis of methanol.[1,2] This combination of steam
and dry reforming has been named bi-reforming.

Bi-reforming could be
advantageous in the use of natural gas sources containing substantial amounts
of CO2. This CO2 would, otherwise, have to be separated
to allow further processing of the natural gas. Some natural gas sources
contain CO2 concentration from 5% up to 70%. In most cases, once
separated, the CO2 is then released into the atmosphere. Only in few
locations is CO2 sequestered. The natural gas at the Sleipner platform
in Norway containing 9% CO2 is for example currently separated and
sequestered beneath the North Sea in a deep saline aquifer.

Experimental

To mimic conditions closer to commercial operations, the bi-reforming
reaction was conducted at pressures up to 35 bars in a tubular reactor system specially
built for this purpose and able to withstand both high pressure and high
temperature in a gas mixture with a high carbon activity. The catalysts used
were based on Ni deposited on various supports including alumina, alkali earth
oxides and combinations thereof. Reaction temperatures ranging from 700°C to 870°C were investigated. A
gas feed composition of CH4/CO2/H2O with a
molar ratio of 3/1.2/2.4 was typically used. The reaction was followed by an
online GC equipped with a TCD.

Results

In general the catalysts were tested for at least 50 hours
to determine their stability as a function of time. The conversion of methane
as well as carbon dioxide was stable over the length of the experiments (Figure
1). The obtained H2/CO ratio of the reaction gases was close to the
desired value of 2. Increasing the amount of water and CO2 compared
to methane increased the methane conversion but did not significantly change
the H2/CO ratio.

As expected from a thermodynamic point of view the methane
conversion decreased with increasing pressure. To some extent this effect could
be compensated by a higher reaction temperature and/or higher water and CO2
content in the feed gas.

Figure 1. Bi-reforming at 7 bars. Conversion of methane
and carbon dioxide.

Acknowledgements

Support of our work by the Loker Hydrocarbon
Research Institute and the United States Department of Energy is gratefully
acknowledged.

References

[1]        G. A. Olah, G. K. S. Prakash, A. Goeppert, J.
Am. Chem. Soc.
2011, 133, 12881.

[2]        G. A. Olah, A. Goeppert, G. K. S. Prakash,
Beyond Oil and Gas: The Methanol Economy, 2nd ed., Wiley VCH,
Weinheim, Germany, 2009.