Life cycle assessment of plasma-assisted ethylene production from rich-in-methane gas streams

Literature Information

Publication Date 2020-01-08
DOI 10.1039/C9SE00736A
Impact Factor 6.367
Authors

Evangelos Delikonstantis, Elorri Igos, Michael Augustinus, Enrico Benetto



Abstract

Herein, the sustainability of plasma-assisted processes for ethylene production from rich-in-methane gas streams namely, natural and shale gas, is investigated by performing life cycle assessment (LCA). Two plasma-assisted process alternatives, a direct gas conversion to ethylene (one-step) and a stepwise gas conversion to acetylene followed by acetylene-to-ethylene hydrogenation (two-step), both previously demonstrated in the lab and modeled on a large scale, are evaluated using the SimaPro® software and ecoinvent database. Different scenarios regarding purge stream utilization and electricity sources are considered for both process alternatives. On the basis of LCA results, it is highly probable (confidence interval 93.5%) that the two-step process results in a lower carbon footprint than the one-step process. The two-step process, powered by electricity generated by wind turbines and utilizing the purge stream as the byproduct (instead of flaring it), produces the lowest carbon footprint among all studied scenarios. When natural gas is utilized as the feedstock, the two-step plasma-assisted ethylene production process is more environmentally sustainable than other peer processes (i.e. thermally driven and bio-based). When shale gas is used, greenhouse gas emissions decrease compared to natural gas, resulting in a comparable carbon footprint to the conventional (naphtha cracking) process. Further, aside from ethylene production onshore, plasma reactors can also be employed for ethylene production offshore, thereby valorizing currently wasted rich-in-methane gas streams and thus reducing global greenhouse gas emissions.

Source Journal

Sustainable Energy & Fuels

Sustainable Energy & Fuels
CiteScore: 0
Self-citation Rate: 0%
Articles per Year: 0

Recommended Suppliers

ChinaShanghai JiuFang Technology Co., Ltd.
ChinaShenzhen Kangyuda Luminescent Materials Co., Ltd.
GermanyWEVO-CHEMIE GmbH
ChinaLianyungang Beilida New Materials Co., Ltd.
GermanyTeSup
ChinaDongguan city Chuangsheng Machinery Equipment Co., Ltd
ChinaGuizhou Destinate Fine Chemical Industry
ChinaExcenen Pharmatech Co., Ltd
GermanyGestra AG
ChinaWenzhou Zhongshu Machinery Co., Ltd.
Disclaimer
This page provides academic journal information for reference and research purposes only. We are not affiliated with any journal publishers and do not handle publication submissions. For publication-related inquiries, please contact the respective journal publishers directly.
If you notice any inaccuracies in the information displayed, please contact us at [email protected]. We will promptly review and address your concerns.