A ternary semicontinuous system for the separation of bio-dimethyl ether from methanol and water is presented. The performance of eight potential control configurations, including the application of temperature inferential control, is evaluated. Dynamic simulations of the semicontinuous system and associated control scheme demonstrate that the temperature inferential control configuration is effective in achieving the separation objectives while remaining within operational limits. The semicontinuous system using the inferential temperature control scheme is simulated and shown to be economically preferable to the traditional continuous process for a range of production rates.
A review of energy conversion systems which use solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs) as their primary electricity generation component is presented. The systems reviewed are largely geared for development and use in the short-and longterm future. These include systems for bulk power generation, distributed power generation, and systems integrated with other forms of energy conversion such as fuel production. The potential incorporation of CO 2 capture and sequestration technologies and the influences of potential government policies are also discussed. Review pubs.acs.org/IECR
A zero-emissions power plant with high efficiency is presented. Syngas, produced by the gasification of coal, is shifted to produce H 2 which in turn fuels stacks of solid oxide fuel cells. Because the fuel cells maintain separate anode and cathode streams, air can be used as the oxygen source without diluting the fuel exhaust with nitrogen. This enables recovery of CO 2 from the exhaust with a very small energy penalty. As a result, an absorption-based CO 2 recovery process is avoided, as well as the production of large quantities of high-purity O 2 , allowing a high overall thermal efficiency and essentially eliminating the energy penalty for carbon capture.The air separation unit (ASU) collects air and recovers oxygen by cryogenic distillation. The oxygen is primarily used
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.