4.6 Article

Hydrogen Utilization in the Sustainable Manufacture of CO2-Based Methanol

Journal

INDUSTRIAL & ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY RESEARCH
Volume 61, Issue 18, Pages 6163-6172

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.1c04295

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) [PID2020-114787-RB-I00]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [19/05483]

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The production of alternative CO2-based products is crucial for reducing reliance on fossil resources. This study analyzes the conditions for using H-2 as an intermediate vector in sustainable methanol production and compares it with fossil-based and electrochemical routes. The findings suggest that the use of low-carbon electricity and higher electrolysis efficiency and product concentration can enable sustainable alternatives.
Production of alternative CO2-based products may play a major role in decoupling fossil resources to the economy's needs. CO2 hydrogenation is one of the most readily operational CO2 conversion pathways to produce chemicals. Beyond this, electrochemical, photoelectrochemical, and photochemical CO2 conversion routes have gained attention as long-term direct conversion routes. This work analyzes under what conditions H-2 could be a sustainable intermediate vector in producing renewable hydrogen-based methanol (hMeOH) and compares it with the fossil-based (fMeOH) and the emerging electrochemical-based (eMeOH) routes. The technological and exogenous drivers are identified, and the trade-offs between alternatives are assessed under an integrated life cycle approach. The deployment of low carbon hMeOH is locally conditioned to use electricity with carbon intensities of 150 kg of CO2e/MWh or lower. Higher electrolysis efficiency (>70%) and product concentration (>40 wt %) are needed in the eMeOH route to be competitive with the H-2-based path. Substitution of fMeOH by wind-powered hMeOH could avoid substantial CO2 emissions (-1.57 kg of CO2e/kg) and fossil resources (-0.61 kg of oil(eq)/kg) but at the cost of almost triple the impact of land use.

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