Journal Article10.1016/J.RSER.2016.09.044
A comparative overview of hydrogen production processes
2.4K
TL;DR: A comparative overview of the major hydrogen production methods is carried out in this article, where the process descriptions along with the technical and economic aspects of 14 different production methods are discussed, and the results regarding both the conventional and renewable methods are presented.
read more
Abstract: Climate change and fossil fuel depletion are the main reasons leading to hydrogen technology. There are many processes for hydrogen production from both conventional and alternative energy resources such as natural gas, coal, nuclear, biomass, solar and wind. In this work, a comparative overview of the major hydrogen production methods is carried out. The process descriptions along with the technical and economic aspects of 14 different production methods are discussed. An overall comparison is carried out, and the results regarding both the conventional and renewable methods are presented. The thermochemical pyrolysis and gasification are economically viable approaches providing the highest potential to become competitive on a large scale in the near future while conventional methods retain their dominant role in H2 production with costs in the range of 1.34–2.27 $/kg. Biological methods appear to be a promising pathway but further research studies are needed to improve their production rates, while the low conversion efficiencies in combination with the high investment costs are the key restrictions for water-splitting technologies to compete with conventional methods. However, further development of these technologies along with significant innovations concerning H2 storage, transportation and utilization, implies the decrease of the national dependence on fossil fuel imports and green hydrogen will dominate over the traditional energy resources.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Green-hydrogen research: What have we achieved, and where are we going? Bibliometrics analysis
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the evolution of green-hydrogen research themes since the UN Sustainable Development Goals were adopted in 2015 by utilizing bibliographic couplings, keyword co-occurrence, and keyphrase analysis of 642 articles from 2016 to 2021 in the Scopus database.
109
Conventional and microwave-assisted pyrolysis of gumwood: a comparison study using thermodynamic evaluation and hydrogen production.
Ashak Mahmud Parvez,Ashak Mahmud Parvez,Tao Wu,Muhammad T. Afzal,Sannia Mareta,Tianbiao He,Ming Zhai +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the energy and exergetic assessment of pyrolysis-derived gas, char and oil from gumwood under conventional and microwave heating, and they showed that at each temperature, the corresponding energy, exergy rates of gas under microwave heating were found to be 23% and 26%, respectively, higher than those of conventional one.
107
Recent advances in elevated-temperature pressure swing adsorption for carbon capture and hydrogen production
TL;DR: In this paper, advanced technologies concerning warm gas carbon capture and hydrogen production from carbon-based fuels are reviewed, with a primary focus on the elevated-temperature pressure swing adsorption process coupled with the water gas shift reaction and in-situ CO2 adorption.
107
Green Hydrogen Production from Raw Biogas: A Techno-Economic Investigation of Conventional Processes Using Pressure Swing Adsorption Unit
Gioele Di Marcoberardino,Dario Vitali,Francesco Spinelli,Marco Binotti,Giampaolo Manzolini +4 more
- 25 Feb 2018
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discussed the techno-economic assessment of hydrogen production from biogas with conventional systems, including steam reforming (SR) and autothermal reforming (ATR), using Aspen Adsorption.
106
Comparative Life-Cycle-Assessment analysis of three major water electrolysis technologies while applying various energy scenarios for a greener hydrogen production
TL;DR: In this paper, the potential environmental impacts of a greener hydrogen production have been analyzed taking the three most important water electrolysis technologies alkaline electrolysis (AEC), polymer electrolyte membrane (PEMEC), and solid oxide electrolysis cell (SOEC) into account.
105
References
Energy production from biomass (Part 1): Overview of biomass.
TL;DR: The potential of a restored landfill site to act as a biomass source, providing fuel to supplement landfill gas-fuelled power stations, is examined, together with a comparison of the economics of power production from purpose-grown biomass versus waste-biomass.
4.9K
Metal hydride materials for solid hydrogen storage: a review
TL;DR: A review of metal hydrides on properties including hydrogen-storage capacity, kinetics, cyclic behavior, toxicity, pressure and thermal response is presented in this article, where a group of Mg-based hydride stand as promising candidate for competitive hydrogen storage with reversible hydrogen capacity up to 7.6 W% for on-board applications.
3.3K
An overview of hydrogen production technologies
TL;DR: A review of technologies related to hydrogen production from both fossil and renewable biomass resources including reforming (steam, partial oxidation, autothermal, plasma, and aqueous phase) and pyrolysis is presented in this article.
3.2K
Recent progress in alkaline water electrolysis for hydrogen production and applications
Kai Zeng,Dongke Zhang +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a review of the current state of knowledge and technology of hydrogen production by water electrolysis and identifies areas where R&D effort is needed in order to improve this technology.
3K
Hydrogen production by biological processes: a survey of literature
Debabrata Das,Debabrata Das +1 more
TL;DR: The paper presents a survey of biological hydrogen production processes, and the microorganisms and biochemical pathways involved in hydrogen generation processes are presented in some detail.
2.1K