Publication | Open Access
Converting Wind Energy to Ammonia at Lower Pressure
72
Citations
28
References
2017
Year
EngineeringGas ConversionEnergy EfficiencyEnergy ConversionRenewable Wind EnergyAlternative Energy SolutionChemical EngineeringConversion SystemWind EnergyRenewable Energy SystemsAlternative FuelEnergy ApplicationsEnergy ProductionAmmoniaEnergy EngineeringEnergyConventional Ammonia CondensationSustainable EnergyEnvironmental EngineeringWind Energy Technology
Renewable wind energy can be used to make ammonia. However, wind-generated ammonia costs about twice that made from a traditional fossil-fuel driven process. To reduce the production cost, we replace the conventional ammonia condensation with a selective absorber containing metal halides, e.g., calcium chloride, operating at near synthesis temperatures. With this reaction-absorption process, ammonia can be synthesized at 20 bar from air, water, and wind-generated electricity, with rates comparable to the conventional process running at 150–300 bar. In our reaction-absorption process, the rate of ammonia synthesis is now controlled not by the chemical reaction but largely by the pump used to recycle the unreacted gases. The results suggest an alternative route to distributed ammonia manufacture which can locally supply nitrogen fertilizer and also a method to capture stranded wind energy as a carbon-neutral liquid fuel.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1