April 4, 2023
Journal Article
Methane catalytic pyrolysis by microwave and thermal heating over carbon nanotube-supported catalysts: productivity, kinetics, and energy efficiency
Abstract
Methane catalytic pyrolysis, which is the reaction to produce hydrogen and carbon without emitting CO2, represents an approach for decarbonization using natural gas as an energy resource. The endothermic pyrolysis reaction was carried out under two heating scenarios: convective thermal heating and microwave-driven irradiative heating. The pyrolysis reaction was conducted at 550-600 °C over carbon nanotube-supported Ni-Pd and Ni-Cu catalysts. On both catalysts, an enhanced methane conversion rate was observed under microwave irradiation. The enhanced catalytic activity was hypothetically caused by the presence of free electrons in the carbon atoms within CNT that enabled the CNT support to absorb microwave energy effectively and to be heated efficiently by microwave. The microwave catalytic pyrolysis has shown improvement in kinetics, where the apparent activation energy dropped from 45.5 kJ/mol under conventional convective heating to 24.8 kJ/mol under microwave irradiation. When the methane conversion rate is increased by 37 %, the microwave power consumption only changed by 10.8 %. The research demonstrated the potential of transforming natural gas to clean hydrogen and value-added carbon in a more energy-efficient way. Process simulation and techno-economic analysis showed that potentially hydrogen minimum selling price of about $1 /kg H2 could be achieved.Published: April 4, 2023