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  4. Power-to-methane via co-electrolysis of H2O and CO2: The effects of pressurized operation and internal methanation
 
research article

Power-to-methane via co-electrolysis of H2O and CO2: The effects of pressurized operation and internal methanation

Wang, Ligang  
•
Rao, Megha
•
Diethelm, Stefan  
Show more
September 15, 2019
Applied Energy

This paper presents a model-based investigation to handle the fundamental issues for the design of co-electrolysis based power-to-methane at the levels of both the stack and system: the role of CO2 in co-electrolysis, the benefits of employing pressurized stack operation and the conditions of promoting internal methanation. Results show that the electrochemical reaction of co-electrolysis is dominated by H2O splitting while CO2 is converted via reverse water-gas shift reaction. Increasing CO2 feed fraction mainly enlarges the concentration and cathode-activation overpotentials. Internal methanation in the stack can be effectively promoted by pressurized operation under high reactant utilization with low current density and large stack cooling. For the operation of a single stack, methane fraction of dry gas at the cathode outlet can reach as high as 30 vol.% (at 30 bar and high flowrate of sweep gas), which is, unfortunately, not preferred for enhancing system efficiency due to the penalty from the pressurization of sweep gas. The number drops down to 15 vol.% (at 15 bar) to achieve the highest system efficiency (at 0.27 A/cm(2)). The internal methanation can serve as an effective internal heat source to maintain stack temperature (thus enhancing electrochemistry), particularly at a small current density. This enables the co-electrolysis based power-to-methane to.achieve higher efficiency than the steam-electrolysis based (90% vs 86% on higher heating value, or 83% vs 79% on lower heating value without heat and converter losses).

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.apenergy.2019.05.098
Web of Science ID

WOS:000482245500018

Author(s)
Wang, Ligang  
Rao, Megha
Diethelm, Stefan  
Lin, Tzu-En  
Zhang, Hanfei
Hagen, Anke
Marechal, Francois  
Van Herle, Jan  
Date Issued

2019-09-15

Published in
Applied Energy
Volume

250

Start page

1432

End page

1445

Subjects

Energy & Fuels

•

Engineering, Chemical

•

Engineering

•

energy storage

•

power-to-methane

•

solid-oxide eletrolyzer

•

co-electrolysis

•

co2 utilization

•

pressurized operation

•

internal methanation

•

solid-oxide electrolyzer

•

fuel production

•

dusty-gas

•

cells

•

model

•

hydrogenation

•

optimization

•

simulation

•

transport

•

catalysts

Note

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SCI-STI-FM  
SCI-STI-JVH  
Available on Infoscience
September 19, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/161269
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