Hydrogen Production Using Steam Methane Reforming 1755134304
Hydrogen Production Using Steam Methane Reforming 1755134304
Abstract
Hydrogen gas, as an energy fuel, has a promising future in the energy transition to significantly decarbonize the
global transportation and energy industries. Hydrogen is produced from diverse resources by various technologies
worldwide. Steam methane reforming (SMR) is the most important and economic process. However, SMR emits
significant carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions as a byproduct of hydrogen production. To mitigate CO2 emissions
to the atmosphere, an integrated hydrogen production process consisting of SMR technology coupled with carbon
capture and storage technologies is discussed including an assessment of the overall economics.
1. Introduction
Hydrogen, as the simplest and most abundant element on earth, has wide applications. These multiple uses can
be grouped into two large categories: hydrogen as a feedstock and hydrogen as a clean energy fuel. As a feedstock,
hydrogen has been widely used in chemical and petrochemical industries, and this will continue to grow and
evolve. The largest consumer of hydrogen is ammonia production which in turn is a primary feedstock in the
fertilizer industry. Hydrocracking and hydrodesulfurization (refinery fuel upgrading) are the second largest
hydrogen consumers.
Hydrogen as an energy fuel has a promising future. Its usage for this purpose has already begun and continues to
gradually increase. Hydrogen fuel is an efficient and clean energy carrier, and when combusted, produces only
water as a by-product. Hydrogen also has a higher energy density than all other fossil fuels. Table 1 below
illustrates the energy density of hydrogen and most common fossil fuels [1].
Hydrogen can be classified as one of five possible types, depending on the mode of production. Hydrogen
obtained from natural gas through the SMR process is called grey hydrogen. If the resulting carbon dioxide (CO2)
is captured and stored, this is referred to as blue hydrogen. If biogas is used, it is considered to be green hydrogen.
The electrolysis version is in shades of grey (standard energy) and green depending on the power source and its
relative emissions. For example, electrolysis is often considered a zero-emission process; however, the energy
production demanded by this process may have emissions associated with it and these must also be
considered. It’s important to note that the definitions are not standard.
1
Corresponding author: [email protected]
1
Fuel Energy content (MJ/kg) Energy content (Btu/lb)
Ethanol 29.6 12725.7
Methanol 19.7 8469.5
Coke 27 11607.9
Wood (dry) 16.2 6964.8
Bagasse 9.6 4127.3
Table 1 Energy Density of Various Fuels [1]
Hydrogen can be produced from various sources, including nuclear, natural gas, coal, biomass, but also including
other renewable sources such as solar, wind, hydroelectric, or geothermal energy. The production of hydrogen
can be achieved via various process technologies, including thermal (natural gas reforming, renewable liquid and
bio-oil processing, biomass, and coal gasification), electrolytic (water splitting using a variety of energy sources),
and photolytic (splitting of water using sunlight through biological and electrochemical materials). Among the
various technologies and raw materials available today, hydrogen is mainly produced by steam reforming of
natural gas. Technical data indicates that close to 50% of the global demand is generated via steam reforming of
natural gas, 30% from oil/naphtha reforming from refinery/chemical industrial off-gases, 16% from coal
gasification, 3.9% from water electrolysis, and 0.1% from other sources [2].
Steam reforming of hydrocarbons, especially natural gas, is the most important and economic process for
production of hydrogen and syngas in many chemical and petrochemical processes. Figure 1 is a photo of an SMR
plant.
2
2. Process Configuration and Description
2.1 Process Configuration
Depending on the SMR applications, there are various process configurations. Figure 2 is a block diagram for
different applications of steam methane reforming.
SECONDARY
REFORMING
CO2 ABSORPTION CO2 ABSORPTION CO2 ABSORPTION CO2 ABSORPTION CO2 ABSORPTION CO2 ABSORPTION
H2
Figure 2 Block diagram showing different applications of steam methane reforming [4]
The final hydrogen purity from an SMR using conventional purification is about 98%, while more recent plants
employing pressure swing adsorption (PSA) can produce 99.99% purity [4].
According to N. Muradov, CO2 emissions from the SMR process amount to 0.44 Nm3 CO2/Nm3 H2 (or 9.7 kg
CO2/kg H2) [5]. A typical SMR hydrogen plant with a capacity of 1000 e³Sm³/d of hydrogen produces close to
400 e³Sm³/d of CO2, which is typically vented into the atmosphere. It should be noted that the CO2 emission
intensity varies, depending on the natural gas feedstock composition. Coupling of the SMR process with carbon
capture and sequestration (CCS) has been advocated by a number of research groups worldwide as a potentially
viable approach to drastically diminish CO2 emissions from the H2 manufacturing processes [5]. Given the CO2
density of the reaction, this seems like a natural fit.
3
Until about 20-30 years ago, CO2 was separated from raw hydrogen after a CO-shift reactor using chemical
absorption methods (e.g., amine-based or hot potassium carbonate solvents), resulting in a pure CO2 stream
released to the atmosphere. Modern SMR plants use physical adsorption technology - in particular, PSA units.
Figure 3 depicts a simplified block diagram of a typical modern SMR plant.
Flue Gas
CO2 = 19%
PCO2 = 20 kPa
NG Fuel
In a typical modern SMR plant, about 60% of the total CO2 produced is contained in the shifted gas, with the
remaining 40% being the product of the natural gas fuel combustion that provides input to the steam reformer [4].
Typical CO2 flow rates and CO2 partial pressures in the shifted gas, PSA tail gas, and steam reformer flue gas of
an SMR plant with the capacity of 100e3 Nm3/hr gas are shown in Table 2 [5].
SMR streams CO2 flow rate (kmol/h) CO2 partial pressure (bara)
Shifted gas 1000 3.40
PSA tail gas 1000 0.60
Flue gas 1850 0.20
Table 2 Typical CO2 flow rates and CO2 partial pressures for different streams in an SMR plant with a
capacity of 100e3 Nm3/hr H2 [5]
To mitigate CO2 emissions to the atmosphere, the CO2 can be captured from any of the three CO2-containing
streams, as shown in Figure 4.
The CO2 removal efficiency from SMR streams at different removal points could be as high as 99% for location
1 (shifted gas), and 90% for location 2 (PSA tail gas) and location 3 (flue gas). As shown in Figure 3, CO2
concentration and thus partial pressure vary from one location to another in the SMR process chain; thus, different
sets of technologies could be applied for effective CO2 removal from these streams.
US Department of Energy (DOE) Natural Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) researchers analyzed an
alternative scheme for SMR integration with CO2 capture by chemical absorption and PSA methods as presented
4
in Figure 5 [5]. Terms include AGR (acid gas removal), MEA (monoethanolamine) and MDEA (methyl
diethanolamine) for CO2 capture mechanisms.
Flue Gas
CO2 Removal
3 90%
CO2 Removal
99%
NG FEED SMR H2
WGS 1 PSA
REACTOR
Figure 4 Carbon dioxide removal options from SMR CO2 containing streams [5]
Stack
CO2
Fuel Gas
Air
Supplemental
NG
Figure 5 Block flow diagram of SMR with CO2 capture by chemical absorption and PSA methods [5]
In this study, the SMR plant was reported to have an effective thermal efficiency of 69.7% (on a higher heating
value) and a production rate of 617 tonne/day H2. The amounts of CO2 recovered and emitted were estimated at
8.84 and 0.98 tonne CO2/tonne H2 respectively. The capture of large amounts of CO2 is energy intensive and
requires additional capital investment and operating costs.
The addition of CO2 capture to an SMR plant inevitably affects its overall energy utilization efficiency. The
hydrogen energy efficiency is measured by the energy content of the hydrogen product as the percentage of the
energy content in the feedstock plus the consumed fuel. The energy content can be measured using two reference
5
points depending on whether the water product is treated as a liquid or steam. The higher heating value (HHV) is
measured by treating the water product as a liquid, whereas the lower heating value (LHV) excludes the latent
heat used to evaporate the water products from combustion. According to a study analyzing different SMR plant
designs, the overall energy efficiency of a modern SMR plant with a capacity of 720 tonne/d H2 (at a pressure of
6 MPa) without CO2 capture is estimated at 76% (on a lower heating value basis) with overall CO2 emissions of
9.1 kg CO2 per kg H2. However, if the SMR plant is modified to produce nearly pure CO2 as a coproduct (e.g. via
combination of amine solvent scrubbing with PSA), the efficiency would be decreased to 73% with the CO2
removal rate reduced to 8 kg CO2 per kg H2 [5].
6
2.2.2 Steam Gas Reforming
The sulfur-free gas is mixed with a fixed amount of superheated steam to maintain the desired steam-to-
hydrocarbon ratio. The steam-to-hydrocarbon ratio is kept within a range that is high enough to prevent laydown
of coke on the reforming catalyst (catalyst deactivation), but low enough to avoid overloading the reformer duty.
Typically for a methane feed, the ratio would be 3:1 (molar basis).
The combination of natural gas and steam is heated to about 538oC with the furnace flue gas before entering the
reformer tubes. Since the reforming reactions are endothermic, additional heat is required to maintain the reaction
temperature as the mixture flows down through catalyst-filled reformer tubes. The reaction for the steam methane
reforming (SMR) is shown as equation (1)
CH4 + H2O → 3H2 + CO (1)
∆H = 206 MJ/kmol [1]
The WGS reaction effluent leaving the feed preheat exchanger enters the tube side of the BFW preheater, and
then the tube side of the deaerator preheater to recover the reaction heat, where it is cooled to 163oC and 133oC
respectively. To meet the downstream hydrogen purification inlet temperature requirement, the effluent is then
cooled to 40oC through an air cooler. The cooled effluent stream is sent to the process condensate separator to
separate the steam condensate from the gas. The gas is sent to the carbon capture unit for CO2 removal
7
Some hydrogen production plant designs have the HTS reactor only. The CO content in the reaction effluent is
captured in the downstream hydrogen purification unit together with the unconverted methane and is sent to the
reformer furnace as fuel.
Carbon capture and storage/sequestration (CCS) is one of the pathways for CO2 emission mitigation. Among the
wide portfolio of CCS technologies, physical and chemical absorption are considered the most close-to-market
approaches to be applied at industrial scale and are mainly focused on their implementation in energy production
from fossil fuels. Physical absorption is based on the CO2 solubility into the solution without a chemical reaction
which is based on Henry’s law and hence high CO2 partial pressure and low temperatures are highly recommended
for its application. Chemical absorption is based on the reaction between CO2 and specific compounds, solvents,
to form a weak bond between the CO2 and the compounds. Chemical absorption occurs at low CO2 partial
pressure.
The amine-based chemical absorption process has been used for CO2 and H2S removal from gas treating plants
since the 1950s and are considered to be by far the most developed CO2 capture process. CO2 is absorbed typically
using amines to form a soluble carbonate salt. This reaction is reversible – the CO2 can be released by heating the
solution with the carbonate salt in a separate stripping column. The CO2 stripping occurs at reboiler temperatures
of about 120oC and pressures ranging between 40-150 kPag. The process is illustrated in Figure 7 [8].
8
Figure 7 Simplified diagram of conventional acid gas removal process using chemical absorption [8]
The hydrogen rich gas enters the bottom of the absorber, where it contacts the lean solution. The carbon dioxide
is absorbed from the gas, leaving the rest of the contaminants and hydrogen relatively untouched.
The rich solution is then heat exchanged with hot lean solution after flashing to release the dissolved gases, and
enters the top of the stripper. Note that the need for a rich amine pump is dependent on the absorber column
operating pressure and whether there is enough differential between the absorber and stripper columns. Post-
combustion CO2 removal will need the rich amine pump due to the lower flue gas operating pressure. The stripper
uses a steam or glycol reboiler to regenerate the solvent, stripping out the absorbed carbon dioxide. The overhead
from the stripper goes through a condenser to condense into water as reflux and then to an overhead drum, where
the carbon dioxide is separated from the stripper reflux.
Primary alkanolamines such as monoethanolamine (MEA) and diglycolamine (DGA), provide high chemical
reactivity, favored kinetics, medium to low absorption capacity, namely CO2 loading, and acceptable stability.
MEA, the first generation and the most well-known amine-based absorbent is highlighted by its high chemical
reactivity with CO2 (at low partial pressure) and low cost. This amine, however, can be corrosive at higher
concentrations.
Physical absorption processes are highly recommended to separate CO2 in pre-combustion processes that
commonly operate at elevated CO2 partial pressure. Physical solvents are able to selectively capture CO2 in
contact with a gas stream without a chemical reaction occurring. The commonly used processes are Selexol™,
Rectisol™, Ifpexol™, FluorTM, Purisol™, Sulfinol™, and Morphysorb™.
9
The PSA process produces a hydrogen stream up to 99.99% purity. It separates carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide
and unconverted hydrocarbons. A bank of adsorbers operates in a cycle where the adsorbers are rotated through
a higher pressure adsorption cycle, which allows the contaminants to be released from the adsorber. The hydrogen
gas passes through the adsorber as almost pure hydrogen. The contaminants flow into a fuel gas surge drum and
are then recycled to the reformer fuel system. Figure 8 shows a schematic diagram of a PSA system. The switching
valves are all controlled by the central processing unit and operate based on a time cycle
Figure 8 A PSA unit separates carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and unconverted hydrocarbons from
hydrogen [7]
10
Figure 9 Roof-fired reforming heater [7]
11
3.1 Top-Fired Reformer
This type of reformer heater is usually a rectangular box. The tubes are vertical, and inlet and outlet pigtails are
used to connect the inlet header and the outlet transfer line respectively. The tubes are spaced on a pitch, which
allows the burners to fire down between the tubes for optimal heat transfer. The burners have a special “pencil-
shaped flame” design. All burners are located in the penthouse above the inlet manifold. The flame and the flow
through the tubes travel in the same direction.
Hydrogen plants with a single reformer heater and hydrogen production capacities up to 2830e3 Sm3/d of feed
gas (100 MMSCF/d), have used the vertical, down-firing approach. Each burner’s radiant flame covers one-
quarter of four adjacent vertical tubes (except for the outside burners, which cover half of the two adjacent tubes).
The radiant gases exit the box horizontally through a horizontal convection section. The horizontal convection
section is located about 3 m above grade to allow enough height for passage. The horizontal convection provides
for a simpler support structure than that of the side-fired unit.
4. Utilities
The utilities required in a hydrogen plant using SMR are as follows:
LP natural gas fuel
Demineralized water for the BFW
MP steam used for the boiler water deaerator
LP steam for Amine Stripper Column Reboiler
Combustion air for the SMR furnace
12
Nitrogen for startup and shutdown
Instrument Air
Electricity
Flare System
13
The utilities generated include:
HP steam generated by SMR, used for reforming, with surplus available
Electricity generated using the surplus HP steam
LP steam taken from the steam turbine exhaust, typically used for the rich amine regeneration
14
Table 3 Design Assumptions [9]
The main technical and environmental performances are presented in Table 4 [9].
Units Case 1a Case 2 Case 3 Case 1b Case 1c
Oxygen SMR w
Air auto- SMR w
Main Plant Data Conventional auto- amine
thermal Selexol™
SMR w no thermal based
SMR – no carbon
carbon capture SMR – no carbon
capture capture
capture capture
Natural gas flowrate tonne/h 31.37 34.12 32.98 31.37 31.37
Natural gas LHV MJ/kg 46.73 46.73 46.73 46.73 46.73
Natural gas thermal energy (A) MWth 407.26 442.93 428.24 407.26 407.26
Net power output (E=B-D) MWe 10.76 17.55 7.26 1.20 5.33
Net power efficiency (E/A*100) % 2.64 3.96 1.70 0.29 1.31
Hydrogen efficiency (C/A*100) % 73.66 67.73 70.05 73.66 73.66
Energy utilization factor ((C+E)/A*100) % 76.31 71.69 71.75 73.96 74.97
Carbon capture rate % 0.00 0.00 0.00 70.00 65.00
CO2 specific emissions (H2+power) kg/MWh 267.39 284.59 284.37 82.78 95.58
Table 4 Main Technical and Environmental Performance Indicators [9]
As can be observed from Table 4, among various natural gas reforming concepts without carbon capture, the
conventional steam reforming design has the highest energy utilization factor (76.3% vs. 71.7%) due to lower
ancillary power consumption compared to oxygen and air autothermal reforming cases. When the pre-combustion
carbon capture step is introduced, a reduction of overall plant energy utilization factor by about 1.34 to 2.35 % is
seen. There is an advantage for the Selexol™ process (Case 1c) compared to the MDEA process (Case 1b) due
to lower thermal duty required for solvent regeneration (about 0.76 MJ/kg for MDEA vs. 0.08 MJ/kg for
Selexol™). However, another important factor that needs consideration is the solvent circulation rate, which can
be higher for Selexol™ compared to MDEA. The carbon capture rate is about 65% (Selexol™) to 70% (Case 1b
– MDEA process). The MDEA has a higher capture rate due to higher CO2 capture selectivity of chemical
solvents vs. physical solvents [9].
15
For estimation of capital costs and specific capital investment costs (defined as capital cost divided by net energy
production), Figure 11 [9] presents the specific capital investment costs per kW net equivalent (LHV-based
hydrogen thermal output plus net power output) for all evaluated designs.
Case 3
Case 2
Case 1c
Case 1b
Case 1a
0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
Specific capital investment (CAD/kW net equivalent)
Figure 11 Specific capital investment costs for natural gas reforming-based hydrogen production concepts
[9]
Figure 11 indicates that conventional steam reforming without carbon capture has a specific investment cost of
$654 CAD/kw net equivalent. The cost of oxygen autothermal reforming case (Case 2) is about 20% higher due
to the cost contribution of the air separation unit. If pre-combustion CO2 capture is applied for conventional steam
reforming, the specific capital investment cost increases by 45% for the MDEA process (Case 1b) and 37% for
the Selexol™ process (Case 1c) compared to the case without CCS.
For calculation of operational and maintenance (O&M) costs, hydrogen and power production costs and CO2
capture costs, the main economic assumptions used in the assessment are presented in Table 5 [8]. Note, the
reference source data was in Euros and is converted to Canadian dollars based on the exchange rate of 1 Euro to
1.55 Canadian dollars. At the time of the reference publication, the authors used an unusually high market price
for the natural gas feedstock – this has a dramatic effect on system economics.
16
Natural gas price $ / GJ 9.38
BFW water price $ / tonne 0.16
Cooling water price $ / tonne 0.02
MDEA price $ / tonne 6,250
Selexol™ price $ / tonne 10,156
Catalyst price $ / yr 390,625
Cooling water treatment chemicals $ / tonne 0.00
BFW treatment chemicals $ / month 70,313
Direct labour cost $ / yr / person 78,125
Administration cost as percentage of labour cost % 30
Discount rate % 8
CO2 price $ / tonne 7.81
Operational plant life yr 25
Figure 12 [9] presents the fixed and variable O&M costs for all evaluated hydrogen production processes based
on natural gas catalytic reforming.
Case 3
Case 2
Cases
Case 1c
Fixed O&M costs
Variable O&M costs
Case 1b
Case 1a
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
$ / MWh
Figure 12 Fixed and variable O&M costs for natural gas reforming-based hydrogen production concepts [9]
It can be observed that the variable cost component is significantly higher than the fixed one. This is because the
fuel (natural gas) cost has a significant cost impact. The levelised cost of hydrogen (LCOH) and levelised cost of
electricity (LCOE) were calculated using the net present value (NPV) method. By definition, the LCOH is a
measurement of the average present cost of the hydrogen energy production over its lifetime, and the LCOE is a
measurement of the average present cost of the equivalent electricity generation for a generating plant over its
17
lifetime. The CO2 capture costs were calculated based on the following mathematical equation and Table 6
presents the calculated values [9]:
18
Main plant data Units Case 1a Case 2 Case 3 Case 1b Case 1c
Levelised cost of hydrogen (LCOH) $ / MWh 58.47 63.71 61.43 66.70 64.54
Levelised cost of electricity (LCOE) $ / MWh 59.13 63.40 59.75 66.96 64.74
CO2 removal cost $ / tonne - - - 42.47 47.41
CO2 avoided cost $ / tonne - - - 46.27 33.88
Table 6 Costs of hydrogen & electricity and CO2 capture costs [9]
Levelised indicates the average net energy cost over the lifetime of the facility. Table 6 indicates that the hydrogen
production cost has the lowest value for conventional steam reforming design (Case 1a), then air autothermal
reforming (Case 3), then oxygen autothermal reforming (Case 2) – all cases without carbon capture. The
introduction of pre-combustion CO2 capture implies an increase of hydrogen production cost by about 14% for
MDEA process (Case 1b) and 10% for Selexol™ process (Case 1c). The CO2 avoidance cost is lower for the
Selexol™ case than for the MDEA case by about 36%. Figure 13 presents the sensitivity analysis of the hydrogen
cost versus various economic parameters for the conventional steam reforming with Selexol™-based pre-
combustion CO2 capture. It can be observed from Figure 13 that the fuel (natural gas) cost (unsurprisingly) has
a significant impact on the hydrogen production cost.
6. Hydrogen Transportation
The present solutions are varied according to the distance and quantity to be delivered. Three methods of
transporting hydrogen are applied in the present market: road and rail transportation of gaseous and liquid
hydrogen; ocean transportation; and pipelines.
19
6.1 Road and rail transportation
A very common method of transporting hydrogen as is to fill it in pressure-proofed seamless vessels in either
industrial gas standard size (50-150 l) or larger containers (>150 l) for transportation via tube trailers. A typical
set-up is nine tubes for 2000 l each. The filling pressure of cylinders is usually around 18000-25000 kPa [10].
Based on the typical set-up and the filling pressure of 25000 kPag, a trailer can hold an approzimate of 323 kg of
hydrogen product.
20
7. Example of a Low Carbon SMR-based Hydrogen Production Process Concept
As an illustrative example, a design concept of converting a flow of 2832e3 Sm3/d (100 MMSCF/d) natural gas
to hydrogen using the SMR process coupled with CCS was evaluated as Figure 14. It was assumed that 99.8%
CO2 capture rate in the shifted gas is achieved upstream of the PSA via an amine process.
CO2
Fuel Gas
Air
Supplemental
NG
21
Pressure Swing Adsorption (PSA) for purification (>99.95% vol.)
Hydrogen purification and compression Hydrogen delivery pressure: 7550 kPag
Steam pressure levels: 5500 kPag / 300 kPag
Steam turbine isentropic efficiency: 85%
Heat recovery steam generation,
Steam wetness ex. Steam turbine: max. 10%
steam cycle and power block
Minimum approach temperature: ∆Tmin = 10 oC
22
Main Plant Data Units Value
CO2 captured from the shifted gas (99.8%) tonne/d 3685
CO2 emission to the atmosphere tonne/d 3132
23
Figure 14 Illustrative plot plan of a steam reforming-based hydrogen plant [10]
24
8. Appendix
Simulation flow sheet for a low carbon SMR-based hydrogen production concept with a hydrogen capacity of
7877 e³Sm³/d (278 MMSCF/d), required feed NG of 2832 e³Sm³/d (100 MMSCF/d)
Glossary
AGR Acid gas removal
ASU Air separation unit
BFW Boiler feed water
CCS Carbon capture and sequestration
DGA Diglycolamine
DOE Department of energy
HHV Higher heating value
HMB Heat and material balance
HP High pressure
HTS High temperature shift reactor
LCOE Levelised cost of electricity
LCOH Levelised cost of hydrogen
LHV Lower heating value
LNG Liquefied natural gas
LP Low pressure
LTS Low temperature shift reactor
MDEA Methyldiethanolamine
MEA Monoethanolamine
NPV Net present value
NETL National Energy Technology Laboratory (USA)
O&M Operational and maintenance
PSA Pressure swing adsorption
SMR Steam methane reforming
TEG Triethyleneglycol
WGS Wet gas shift
25
References
1. Mostafa El-Shafie, Shinji Kambara, Yukio Hayakawa, Hydrogen Production Technologies Overview,
Journal of Power and Energy Engineering, 2019, 7, 107-154
2. Christos M. Kalamaras and Angelos M. Efstathiou, Hydrogen Production Technologies: Current State
and Future Developments, Conference Papers in Energy, Volume 2013, Article ID 690627, 9 pages,
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
3. Kevin Bakey, The Production of Hydrogen Gas: Steam Methane Reforming, ENGL 202C- Process
Description, March 23, 2015
4. A. M. Adris and B. B. Pruden, On the Reported Attempts to Radically Improve the Performance of the
Steam Methane Reforming Reactor, The Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering, Volume 74, April,
1996
5. A. Basile, A. Iulianelli, Methane Steam Reforming, ScienceDirect 2015
6. Velu Subramani et al., Hydrogen Production and Purification, Vol. 1, Compendium of Hydrogen Energy
7. Fernando Veg, et al., Solvents for Carbon Dioxide Capture, Chapter 8 of Carbon Dioxide Chemistry,
Capture and Oil Recovery, edited by Iyad Karamé, IntechOpen 2018
8. Ray Elshout, Hydrogen Production by Steam Reforming, Chemical Engineering, May 2010
9. Ana-Maria Cormos et al., Economic Assessments of Hydrogen Production Processes Based on Natural
Gas Reforming with Carbon Capture, Chemical Engineering Transactions, Vol. 70, 2018
10. Ram B. et al., Hydrogen Storage, Distribution and Infrastructure, Vol. 2, Compendium of Hydrogen
Energy, 2016
11. Barry Wallerstein, et al., Final Neative Declaration for: Chevron Products Company Refinery Proposed
Hydrogen Plant Project
26
QRCYL-1
XFS5
Q-1 Q Q-6
Steam-NG Reformer
Recycle H2 12
VLVE-102 Q-18
2
28 11
Q-11 Q-16
HP Steam To Reformer VLVE-101 HP Steam Superheater
XFS6
Q-3
XFS4
Q-19
Q-2 XFS7
36 Flue Gas
38 Vent To Atm
Q-9
Purge Gas To 24
RCYL-2
SMR Furnace Burners
31 32 3 23 33 34 40 39 35
37 MIX-102 Reformer Reformer Dummy Reactor HP Steam Feed Preheater Steam HP Steam Combustion Air
Burners SS To Convert All CO to CO2 Gen Coil 1 SS Coil SS Superheater Gen Coil 2 SS Preheater Coil
LP FG 29 MIX-103
VLVE-106
Air
30
5 1 2 3 4 6 7
Reformer Effluent To Steam Generator Feed Preheater TS BFW Preheater TS Deaerator Preheater TS Process Gas
Steam Generator Air Cooler Process Condensate
9 Separator
HT Shift Converter
10
VLVE-100Process Condensate To
BFW Treatment
18
Q-4
CO2_2 To Compression
CO2 Removal=100%
17
Pump Power =3.157 MW
14 Reflux Condenser
1 31 Reflux Accumulator
1 16 15
Q-7 Makeup
2 Reflux Pump
Q-2
FAXR-101
30
1 20 LA Circulation
10 12
Process Gas To
CO2 Removal Amine Contactor Reboiler Duty
Lean Amine Amine Stripper
27 32 Q-3
Surge Tank
6 Amine Charge
Q-6 Pump 13
Amine Reboiler
11
RCYL-1
10 3
2
VLVE-101
8
Lean / Rich
Amine Exchanger
5
PSA Purge
Gas Drum Q-4
1 6
H2 Rich Gas To H2 PSA
PSA Unit
10 H2 Product
4
Q-3
H2 Compressor
Q-1
23
XFS1
1
4 7
Process Condensate To
BFW Treatment VLVE-100
HP Steam 2 22
HP Steam
Generator
HP Steam SPLT-102
Superheater
11
18 3 HP Steam20
Drum
27
24 26
MIX-100 Deaerator Preheater SS
Demin. Water Makeup 21 SPLT-100 MIX-103 Q-7
HP Steam
28 Generation Coil 1
VLVE-104 Deaerator
6 BFW
25
Q-3 8 Q-9 XFS4
XFS9
BFW Preheater SS
BFW Pump 29
HP Steam
Q-4 Generation Coil 2
Q-6 Steam turbine output =42.27 MW
XFS6 Q-8
XFS8
Q-2
Steam Turbine
XFS7 LP Steam
15
SPLT-103
Q-5
16
TRBN-100
5
5 6
1 23
TEG Makeup
Names Units Q-1
Energy Rate MW 0.011414
1
22 21 19 14TEG Surge Tank
RCYL-1
Gas/Glycol Exchanger - B
Glycol Pump Reflux
Condenser 17
Q-1
3 12 QRCYL-1
CO2 To Dehydration Glycol Contactor 18 1
Q-3 Q Q-4
24 2
4 8 7 VLVE-101
Glycol Regenerator
9
XCHG-101 VLVE-100 3
13 15
12
Q-5
Rich Glycol Flash Vessel
16
Glycol Reboiler
11 2
CO2 To Dehydration
Separator
25
13
Q-2 Q-4
Q-6
Q-8 Q-10
6 16 8
18 10
20 12 22 14
4 Stage 1 7 Stage 2 9 11
Aftercooler Aftercooler Stage 3
Compressor Compressor Aftercooler Stage 4 Stage 5
Q-1 Q-3 Compressor
Stage 1 Stage 2 Q-5 Stage 3 Aftercooler Aftercooler
Compressor Compressor
3 Q-7 Q-9 Stage 5
Stage 4
MIX-100
15
2 Stage 1 Stage 4 Stage 5
Suction 5Scrubber Stage 2 Stage 3 Suction21
Scrubber Suction23
Scrubber
Suction17
Scrubber Suction19
Scrubber
CO2_2 To Compression
26
CO2 To
Injection Well