Affiliation
University of Liege; University of ChesterPublication Date
2019-10-21
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Show full item recordAbstract
This chapter discusses the opportunity of using CO2 from industrial sources to produce sustainable methanol. Some important industrial sectors that could be seen as potential sources of CO2 are reviewed: ammonia, steel, ethanol, ethylene, natural gas, cement and power industries. In most cases, despite a promising potential for CO2 re-use, only few projects have been identified and methanol production from CO2 is still marginal. A model for the CO2-to-methanol process is presented based on CO2-rich gas coming from ammonia production process. This model takes into account the different steps from the CO2 capture to the methanol purification, and heat integration is performed in order to determine the reduction of heat consumption achievable for the global process. Even if the economic relevance of the CO2 re-use into methanol still has to be qualified, it offers an estimation of the process efficiency.Citation
Douven, S., Benkoussas, H., Font-Palma C., Léonard, G. (2019). Towards sustainable methanol from industrial CO2 sources. In: M. North & P. Styring (Eds.), Carbon dioxide utilisation: Volume 2: Transformations. De Gruyter.Publisher
De GruyterAdditional Links
https://www.degruyter.com/view/product/537323?rskey=ellc9k&result=2Type
Book chapterLanguage
enISBN
9783110665031Collections
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/