Publication detail

Environmental footprints and implications of converting GHG species to value-added chemicals: a review

Kula, K (Kula, Karolina) Klemes, JJ (Klemes, Jiri Jaromir) Van Fan, Y (Van Fan, Yee) Varbanov, PS (Varbanov, Petar Sabev) Gaurav, GK (Gaurav, Gajendra Kumar) Jasinski, R (Jasinski, Radomir)

English title

Environmental footprints and implications of converting GHG species to value-added chemicals: a review

Type

journal article in Web of Science

Language

en

Original abstract

This paper assesses various approaches that use captured greenhouse gases (GHG) as feedstocks for chemical synthesis. The analysis focuses mainly on the two most abundant anthropogenic GHG, such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4), as well, their conversion technologies to obtain methanol (MeOH), formic acid (FA) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC). These GHG conversions to chemicals technologies are compared with the conventional industrial methods based on fossil feedstocks. The essential information, such as the ranges of energy requirements, environmental footprint and economic production aspects, are summarised. According to the collected information and analysis, the conventional, non-GHG conversion methods are still more environmentally sustainable. Chemicals production technologies based on CO2, such as direct catalytic synthesis to obtain both MeOH and FA, as well as transesterification with MeOH to obtain DMC, are relatively good candidates for implementation on a large scale when a good source of co-reactants such as hydrogen, ethylene carbonate and urea will be provided. In turn, electrochemical methods to synthesise the target chemicals are less feasible due to energy consumption related to the concentration and purification stages of products being the main hotspots. Chemical synthesis based on captured CH4 is currently difficult to evaluate as too little information is available to draw a credible conclusion. However, it may be a trend in future. The limitations of GHG-based conversion for application are related to the capture and transport stages.

English abstract

This paper assesses various approaches that use captured greenhouse gases (GHG) as feedstocks for chemical synthesis. The analysis focuses mainly on the two most abundant anthropogenic GHG, such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4), as well, their conversion technologies to obtain methanol (MeOH), formic acid (FA) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC). These GHG conversions to chemicals technologies are compared with the conventional industrial methods based on fossil feedstocks. The essential information, such as the ranges of energy requirements, environmental footprint and economic production aspects, are summarised. According to the collected information and analysis, the conventional, non-GHG conversion methods are still more environmentally sustainable. Chemicals production technologies based on CO2, such as direct catalytic synthesis to obtain both MeOH and FA, as well as transesterification with MeOH to obtain DMC, are relatively good candidates for implementation on a large scale when a good source of co-reactants such as hydrogen, ethylene carbonate and urea will be provided. In turn, electrochemical methods to synthesise the target chemicals are less feasible due to energy consumption related to the concentration and purification stages of products being the main hotspots. Chemical synthesis based on captured CH4 is currently difficult to evaluate as too little information is available to draw a credible conclusion. However, it may be a trend in future. The limitations of GHG-based conversion for application are related to the capture and transport stages.

Keywords in English

chemical production; environmental impact; greenhouse gases conversion; green technologies; techno-economic assessment

Released

27.05.2024

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH

Location

BERLIN

ISSN

0167-8299

Volume

40

Number

4

Pages from–to

457–480

Pages count

24

BIBTEX


@article{BUT196911,
  author="Karolina {Kula} and Yee Van {Fan} and Petar Sabev {Varbanov} and Gajendra Kumar {Gaurav},
  title="Environmental footprints and implications of converting GHG species to value-added chemicals: a review",
  year="2024",
  volume="40",
  number="4",
  month="May",
  pages="457--480",
  publisher="WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH",
  address="BERLIN",
  issn="0167-8299"
}