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Development of a high-concentration methane production process from atmospheric CO2

November 19th, 2021
Development of a high-concentration methane production process from atmospheric CO2
Schematic diagram of the process of dilute CO2 conversion into methane using a dual-functional catalyst. Credit: Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

Researchers in AIST developed a process for producing high-concentration methane from low-concentration CO2 in collaboration with the Delft University of Technology. The concentration of CO2 as a feed covers the concentration range from dilute atmospheric CO2 to CO2 originating from power plants. This process does not require a CO2 capture and separation process prior to the conversion process.

In order to achieve carbon neutrality, it is essential to develop technology to capture CO2 emitted from power plants and other industrial sectors, CO2 already released into the atmosphere, and convert it to hydrocarbon fuels and valuable chemicals. However, CO2 is generally diluted to concentrations of several percent to tens of percent by gases such as nitrogen and oxygen (approximately 400 ppm in the atmosphere). Thus, an energy-intensive and expensive CO2 purification process is generally required prior to the CO2 conversion process.

Dual-functional catalysts were developed that has the two functions of absorbing CO2 and reacting the absorbed CO2 with hydrogen to convert it into methane. In addition, direct CO2 capture and conversion technology for dilute CO2 was developed that consumes less energy and does not require a CO2 capture and separation pretreatment process. This technology enabled to directly prepare methane with up to 1,000 times or higher concentration from 100 ppm CO2, which is a lower concentration than atmospheric CO2.

Since the atmosphere contains approximately 20 percent oxygen, oxidation of the catalyst was suspected to be the cause of the lower methane yield. Some experiments were conducted to investigate the degradation behavior of catalyst performance with and without oxygen during the CO2 capture. As a result, although some performance degradation was observed, it was found that CO2 could be captured even in an oxygen-containing atmosphere and converted to methane with high efficiency.

In the future, we will develop dual-functional catalysts with high CO2 capture capacity and high methane production per unit catalyst weight and develop highly efficient processes suitable for practical applications.

More information:
Fumihiko Kosaka et al, Enhanced Activity of Integrated CO2 Capture and Reduction to CH4 under Pressurized Conditions toward Atmospheric CO2 Utilization, ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering (2021). DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.0c07162

Provided by Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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