4.8 Article

Economically advantageous pathways for reducing greenhouse gas emissions from industrial hydrogen under common, current economic conditions

Journal

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 1517-1529

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0ee03768k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Energy's Advanced Manufacturing Office Cyclotron Road Program
  2. Resnick Sustainability Institute at Caltech
  3. Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-SC0004993]

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The article discusses the current status and challenges of hydrogen production, analyzing and comparing hydrogen production processes and economic conditions, proposing standards and chemical reactions for clean hydrogen production, and considering economic analysis as crucial for near-term CO2 emissions reductions.
Hydrogen is a major industrial chemical whose manufacture is responsible for similar to 3% of global carbon dioxide emissions. >95% of hydrogen is made via reforming fossil fuels which typically co-produces hydrogen and waste carbon dioxide. Nearly all other hydrogen is co-produced with other commodity chemicals. Unfortunately, many alternative, clean hydrogen production processes are small-scale because they require major reductions in capital cost or energy prices to be economical enough for industry. Because the climate problem is urgent, and the economics of future energy is uncertain, this paper seeks to expand the options for producing industrial-scale, clean hydrogen under common, present-day economic conditions. First, we build a model to understand the economic and carbon dioxide emissions constraints of sulfur electrolysis which is an emerging process that cogenerates hydrogen and co-salable sulfuric acid and has the potential to produce up to 36% of the world's current hydrogen demand under present-day, average US economic conditions. We also use our model to evaluate water electrolysis, which cogenerates hydrogen and waste oxygen, but is not economical under present-day average US economic conditions. We then propose criteria for identifying clean hydrogen production chemistries. Using these criteria, we find enough reactions to have the combined potential to make over 150% of the world's industrial hydrogen needs under present-day, average US economic conditions while reducing cost and reducing or eliminating CO2 emissions. Given the urgency of the climate problem, we believe that an economic analysis, such as this is crucial to near-term CO2 emissions reductions.

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