Hydrogen
is an important energetic vector nowadays. The most common
industrial method to produce ultrapure hydrogen is by steam methane
reforming (SMR), where hydrogen is first produced as a mixture mainly
composed of hydrogen, carbon monoxide, methane, and carbon dioxide.
A purification step by pressure swing adsorption (PSA) is carried
out usually using activated carbon and 5A zeolite as adsorbents. The
design of this process requires fundamental information about the
adsorption and diffusion of the components of SMR-off gas, which is
only available in the literature for a limited number of adsorbents.
In this work, adsorption Henry’s law constants and reciprocal
diffusion time constants have been measured for hydrogen, carbon monoxide,
methane, and carbon dioxide on BPL 4X10 activated carbon and 13X zeolite
pellets from pulse experiments. Adsorption isotherms of these gases
in both adsorbents at temperatures between 298 and 338 K, up to pressures
of 20 bar for hydrogen and 2–5 bar for the other gases, have
also been measured volumetrically. A PSA cycle for hydrogen purification
using BPL activated carbon and 13X zeolite has been designed introducing
the measured adsorption and diffusion data in a simulation tool. The
process can yield 99.99+% hydrogen with 90% recovery and 7.2 mol H2 kg–1 h–1. If 13X zeolite
is replaced by 5A zeolite with the same operating conditions, the
hydrogen purity falls down to 99.81%.
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