4.7 Article

Coal-direct chemical looping hydrogen generation with BaMnO3 perovskite oxygen carrier

Journal

FUEL PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY
Volume 233, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuproc.2022.107296

Keywords

Coal hydrogen production; Chemical looping; Perovskite; BaMnO (3); Lattice oxygen

Funding

  1. Na-tional Natural Science Foundation of China [52176109]

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Coal-direct chemical looping hydrogen generation (CDCLHG) is a novel process that directly produces H-2 from coal and captures CO2. In this study, perovskite oxygen carriers were synthesized and BaMnO3 was found to be the optimal oxygen carrier for CDCLHG, achieving high H-2 gas production with a high H-2 gas production rate. The BaMnO3-delta obtained during the reaction process showed the conversion of lattice oxygen to carbonate oxygen and can recover its initial structure.
Coal-direct chemical looping hydrogen generation (CDCLHG) is a novel process that uses coal to directly produce H-2 with inherent CO2 capture. A key issue is to find out suitable oxygen carriers for this process. In this study, perovskite was proposed as the oxygen carrier for CDCLHG, and a series of Mn-based and Fe-based perovskite oxides were synthesized by a sol-gel method for CDCLHG reactions in a fixed-bed reactor. The results showed that BaMnO3 was an optimal oxygen carrier for CDCLHG, which could obtain H-2-rich gas (> 85%) with a high H-2 gas production rate, about 13 times higher than that in char steam gasification. Further tests showed that the optimal reaction temperature and O/C ratio were 850 degrees C and 1: 0.05, respectively. XRD and XPS patterns indicated that part of the lattice oxygen in BaMnO3 could convert to the carbonate oxygen in BaCO3 during the fuel oxidation stage (FO stage) and obtained BaMnO3-delta with plentiful oxygen vacancies in it. The BaMnO3-delta could partially restore its lattice oxygen in the reduction of steam stage (RS stage) and completely recover its initial structure in the air calcining stage (AC stage). SEM images showed that the decrease of BaMnO3 reaction per-formance after 9 cycles was mainly due to ash accumulation.

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