UFTO Note - Non-Thermal Plasma H2, no CO2 - Jun 26, 2003
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Cleantech 706 Posts |
Subject: UFTO Note - Non-Thermal Plasma H2, no
CO2
Date: 26 Jun 2003
Precision H2, a Canadian company, is developing a non-thermal
plasma process which disassembles methane (CH4) into hydrogen and
carbon black. Note, no CO2!
There are dozens of plasma companies, often focused on medical
waste, and some on power (with coal or some waste stream as the
feedstock). (See footnote) Usually these are hot plasmas, and
tend to be expensive due to the materials problems at high
temperature. In a plasma, sometimes called the 4th state of
matter, material is very highly ionized by an electrical arc
discharge. Lightning is a good example, and many plasma systems
are brute force, require a lot of energy, and get very hot.
A so-called "non-thermal" plasma is one in which the electric
discharge is controlled and confined. Locally it is extremely
hot, but each spark doesn't last long enough to heat up the
surrounding materials. Precision H2 has created a "plasma
dissociation reactor", where the electrical discharge is
carefully shaped and especially tailored to the specific job of
dismantling methane. The electrical energy goes straight to the
molecule, and doesn't have to get there as heat. (It's a little
bit like cooking with microwaves instead of a conventional oven.)
The methane streaming through the reactor is partly converted to
H2, with the carbon dropping out as a nanopowder. The output is
then a blend of methane enriched with hydrogen (hythane). In an
intriguing twist, this blend can be sent to a fuel cell which
will consume the hydrogen, leaving the methane to be cycled back
to the reactor. In effect, the fuel cell itself is used to
separate out the hydrogen--for its own use. This configuration
would produce electricity directly, rather than hydrogen. Pure
hydrogen is gotten by using PSA (pressure swing absorption) or
membranes to do the separation. Potential partners are already in
discussions on both fronts (i.e. fuel cells and purification).
Also, hythane can be used directly in engines, to good advantage.
The key is electronics (pulse shaping, and analysis and control
of the discharge), and costs for electronics are well understood.
Because temperatures remain modest, the reaction chamber can be
made inexpensively, and is readily scalable.
There is an energy penalty--not all the "fuel value" of the
methane is used, because the carbon itself isn't oxidized.
Instead, since no oxygen is present, no CO2 is produced--think of
it as "presequestration", with resulting GHG and carbon-trading
benefits. Also, the carbon is in a valuable form which can be
sold, enhancing overall economics. Detailed thermodynamic and
financial models have been developed, and the company believes
that even today, with "one-off" systems, they can produce
hydrogen cost competitively.
The company is raising a round of equity financing.
Contact Dan Fletcher
514-842-3575, danfletcher@precisionh2.com
Precision H2
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
http://www.precisionh2.com/
~~~~~~
An amazing find can be found at:
http://www.noharm.org/nonincineration
"Non-Incineration Medical Waste Treatment Technologies", an
August 2001 report .... explores the environmental and economic
impacts, among other considerations, of about 50 specific
technologies.
Chapter 4 in particular is an exhaustive review of every
technology and nearly every company with a means to destroy
hazardous materials. While the focus is on medical waste, most of
the technologies also apply to hazardous materials, municipal
waste and sludge, biomass, and fossil fuels. Gasification,
pyrolysis, plasmas, and many different chemical and
electrochemical oxidation and reduction methods are out there,
and are being used today at industrial scale. When they can be
made to work, the issues are cost, reliability, system longevity,
emissions (creation of new hazards, e.g. dioxins), materials
handling, feedstock variability, etc. etc. The key is to inject
sufficient energy into the material to break the chemical bonds,
for example, to get it hot enough for long enough (dwell time).
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