Published December 3, 2021 | Version v1

In Situ Catalytic Methanation of Real Steelworks Gases

  • 1. Chair of Process Technology and Industrial Environmental Protection, Montanuniversität Leoben, Franz-Josef-Strasse 18, 8700 Leoben, Austria
  • 2. Voestalpine Stahl GmbH, Voestalpine Straße 3, 4020 Linz, Austria
  • 3. K1-MET GmbH, Stahlstraße 14, 4020 Linz, Austria

Description

The by-product gases from the blast furnace and converter of an integrated steelworks highly contribute to today’s global CO2 emissions. Therefore, the steel industry is working on solutions to utilise these gases as a carbon source for product synthesis in order to reduce the amount of CO2 that is released into the environment. One possibility is the conversion of CO2 and CO to synthetic natural gas through methanation. This process is currently extensively researched, as the synthetic natural gas can be directly utilised in the integrated steelworks again, substituting for natural gas. This work addresses the in situ methanation of real steelworks gases in a lab-scaled, three-stage reactor setup, whereby the by-product gases are directly bottled at an integrated steel plant during normal operation, and are not further treated, i.e., by a CO2 separation step. Therefore, high shares of nitrogen are present in the feed gas for the methanation. Furthermore, due to the catalyst poisons present in the only pre-cleaned steelworks gases, an additional gas-cleaning step based on CuO-coated activated carbon is implemented to prevent an instant catalyst deactivation. Results show that, with the filter included, the steady state methanation of real blast furnace and converter gases can be performed without any noticeable deactivation in the catalyst performance.

Notes

European Union (EU), Research Fund for Coal and Steel: Integrated and intelligent upgrade of carbon sources through hydrogen addition for the steel industry - i3upgrade, grant No. 800659.

Files

Wolf-Zoellner et al. 2021 - In Situ Catalytic Methanation of Real Steelworks Gases.pdf