4 research outputs found
Design and Economic Evaluation of a Coal-Based Polygeneration Process To Coproduce Synthetic Natural Gas and Ammonia
The
steady-state design and economic evaluation of a polygeneration
(POLYGEN) process to coproduce synthetic natural gas (SNG) and ammonia
are studied in this work. POLYGEN has been a widely studied topic
recently, in which several products could be produced parallel at
the same time. One of the two products in this study, SNG, has a composition
and heat value very similar to those of typical natural gas, and can
be used as a replacement in industrial and home usages. Another product,
ammonia, is one of the most important inorganic chemicals in the world,
and could be used as the precursor of various kinds of chemicals,
as fertilizers, or as a cleaning agent. In the POLYGEN process, the
relative production rates for different chemicals could be adjusted
on the basis of different market demands, daily usages, and also changing
political strategies. In our previous study (Yu, B. Y.; Chien, I.
L. Design and Economical Evaluation of a Coal-to-Synthetic Natural
Gas Process. <i>Ind. Eng. Chem. Res.</i> <b>2015</b>, <i>54</i>, 2339–2352), we illustrated that the
SNG production price is lower than the liquefied natural gas importation
price in Taiwan. The SNG production price is 10.837 USD/GJ (USD =
U.S. dollars) in an SNG-only plant. With the POLYGEN process to coproduce
SNG and ammonia, the SNG production cost could become even lower.
If 20% of the syngas is used to produce ammonia, the SNG production
price will drop to 9.365 USD/GJ, and if 40% is used for ammonia production,
the SNG production price will drop further to 7.063 USD/GJ. Thus,
although the POLYGEN process leads to an increasing total capital
investment, it has positive influences from economic aspects. Besides,
the flexibility of shifting the production rate of SNG or ammonia
makes it possible to adapt to changes in the market demand
Design and Economic Evaluation of a Coal-to-Synthetic Natural Gas Process
The steady state design and economic
evaluation for coal to synthetic
natural gas (SNG) process is rigorously studied, and this study could
give a baseline for design and analysis for SNG production in Taiwan
or other countries relying on importation of an energy source. SNG
is a product that holds very similar composition and heat value to
typical natural gas, and can be used as a replacement in industrial
and home usages. Natural gas is an important energy source in Taiwan,
with increasing demand year by year. Because over 99% of our energy
sources is imported in Taiwan, and because of the advantages of coal
over natural gas (lower importation price, great abundance, easier
transportation and storage, etc.), the process that converts coal
into SNG is expected to benefit Taiwan if the related technology is
successfully established. The whole process is divided into several
parts, including air separation unit (ASU), gasification, the syngas
treating section (water gas-shift reaction, syngas cooling, and acid
gas removal), methanation reaction section, and electricity production
block from upstream to downstream. The overall energy conversion efficiency
for the plant is 60.38%, with the SNG production cost to be 10.837
(USD/GJ), thus this process will be economically and practically attractive
Assessment on CO<sub>2</sub> Utilization through Rigorous Simulation: Converting CO<sub>2</sub> to Dimethyl Carbonate
This
paper intends to discuss the economical performances and CO<sub>2</sub> reduction potential of two CO<sub>2</sub>-based dimethyl
carbonate (DMC) production processes through rigorous process simulation.
One of them is the direct production process with addition of butylene
oxide (BO) as dehydrating agent (DIR-BO porocess), while the other
is the indirect production process through ethylene carbonate (EC)
as an intermediate (IND-EC process). Both processes are systematically
optimized and heat-integrated. From economical evaluation, the IND-EC
process exhibits economical attractiveness, while the DIR-BO process
does not. We suggest that once the reaction rate of the DIR-BO process
can be improved, the overall economic performance of the direct process
can be much better. From the aspect of CO<sub>2</sub> reduction, the
net CO<sub>2</sub> emissions throughout both processes are calculated.
We found that DIR-EO process is largely carbon positive, with CO<sub>2</sub> emission of 2.242 (kg CO<sub>2</sub>/kg DMC), yet for the
IND-EC process, it is near carbon neutral, with CO<sub>2</sub> emission
of 0.049 (kg CO<sub>2</sub>/kg DMC). Thus, from the aspect of achieving
CO<sub>2</sub> reduction, converting it into DMC provides limited
benefits
Energy-Efficient Extraction–Distillation Process for Separating Diluted Acetonitrile–Water Mixture: Rigorous Design with Experimental Verification from Ternary Liquid–Liquid Equilibrium Data
In
this paper, an energy-efficient extraction–distillation
process to separate diluted azeotropic acetonitrile–water mixtures
is newly developed. Compared with the conventional azeotropic separation
methods (i.e., extractive distillation), the potential dominant benefit
of this proposed method is that the main separation task can be achieved
by an extraction column without needing reboiler duty. In this work,
an efficient solvent of <i>n</i>-propyl chloride is proposed
to extract the organic compound into the extract phase and to let
water remain in the raffinate phase. Ternary liquid–liquid
equilibrium experiments are also conducted to verify the separation
performance in the extraction column and decanter of the proposed
process. It is found that significant savings of 40.3% in steam cost
and 34.7% in total annual cost can be obtained by the proposed separation
method as compared to that of a three-column extractive distillation
system published in open literature