Improving Absorbent-Enhanced Ammonia Separation For Efficient Small Scale Ammonia Synthesis

06 October 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Synthesized ammonia exiting a reactor with hydrogen and nitrogen can be selectively absorbed by MgCl2 for renewable absorbent-based Haber Bosch for dispersed ammonia manufacturing. Such separation can be more efficient even at elevated temperatures compared to the condensation method used in conventional Haber Bosch process. To determine the optimal conditions to capture and release the most ammonia per thermal cycle of sorbent salt, the sorbent capacity was measured with varying regeneration temperature, regeneration time, and sweep rate under steady-state cycling conditions. In all cases, uptake was limited to bed breakthrough, and cyclic steady state was achieved. By using lower temperature for MgCl2 regeneration (200 °C), the working capacities were maintained comparable to those at higher desorption temperatures (~ 400 ⁰C), even without the use of inert sweep gas. Using a sufficiently high regeneration temperature (~200 ⁰C) allowed for sufficiently low sweep gas that the product ammonia can exceed 72 mol% purity in a mixture of N2 and H2. These results were achieved with a short regeneration time of 20 minutes or less, which is an improvement from hour-long regeneration time previously reported. These measurements identified new operating parameters for more efficient absorber design to produce economical renewable ammonia at small scale.

Keywords

Sustainable
Ammonia
Absorption
Absorbent
Magnesium chloride

Supplementary materials

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Supporting information for "Improving Absorbent-Enhanced Ammonia Separation For Efficient Small Scale Ammonia Synthesis"
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Figure S1. A) working capacity for uptake just before breakthrough and desorption at different times with sweep gas Figure S2. Production rate (working capacity per unit regeneration time) for uptake just before breakthrough Figure S3. Normalized concentration curve for ammonia absorption into MgCl2 supported on SiO2 Figure S4. Optical micrograph showing the absorbent material (magnesium chloride on silica support) Table S1. Our results for ammonia uptake and release using MgCl2 to Hrtus Daniel, Matt Kale and Mahdi Malmali
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