4.4 Article

Biomethane production by adsorption technology: new cycle development, adsorbent selection and process optimization

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10450-020-00250-3

Keywords

Biomethane production; Biogas upgrade; Methane recovery; Vacuum pressure swing adsorption; Carbon molecular sieve; Numerical process simulation

Funding

  1. Air Liquide

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Gas separation by adsorption processes such as pressure swing adsorption (PSA) presents an attractive alternative for upgrading biogas to biomethane. A new vacuum pressure swing adsorption (VPSA) cycle is proposed for a unit designed to purify pre-cleaned biogas (40% CO(2)and 60% CH4) in industrial conditions (feed flow rate more than 500 Nm(3)/h and large-volume equipment). The process simulations performed to optimize the VPSA unit consider the kinetic separation of the feed components by using an appropriate carbon molecular sieve (CMS) adsorbent having a high kinetic separation selectivity for CO(2)with respect to CH4. The designed VPSA unit is composed of five columns that perform three equalization steps. Minimizing methane losses during the regeneration steps necessitates injecting part of the off-gas rich in CO(2)at the bottom of the column during the production step to push the CH(4)forward. The produced biomethane meets the specification (97% CH4) of grid injection purity. The developed cycle allows a CH(4)recovery of 92% to be obtained with a specific energy consumption of 0.35 kWh/Nm(3), thus meeting the initial requirements for industrial exploitation of VPSA technology for biomethane purification from biogas sources.

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