A comparative exergoenvironmental assessment of thermochemical copper-chlorine cycles for sustainable hydrogen production
Faran Razi,
Kasun Hewage and
Rehan Sadiq
Energy, 2024, vol. 300, issue C
Abstract:
Hydrogen is one of the highly promising clean solutions to address the concerns of energy security in the future given the rapid rate of depletion of naturally occurring hydrocarbon sources. However, it is of immense importance that hydrogen is obtained through sources that ensure sustainability. Thermochemical water-splitting processes are among such routes of hydrogen production that are both sustainable and environmentally benign. Thus, this study focuses on assessing the copper-chlorine thermochemical cycles that are among the more promising cycles of the chlorine family in terms of efficiency and cost-effectiveness. Moreover, this study considers a comparative exergoenvironmental evaluation of the four variants of the copper-chlorine cycle that vary in the number and the nature of steps. A comparison in this regard is carried out between the various steps of each cycle in terms of the component-associated environmental impact rates and environmental impact rates of energy transfer as well as the overall environmental impacts of all cycles. In addition, a comparison of the global warming potential of hydrogen synthesized through utilizing various electricity sources is also performed. Based on our evaluations, hydrolysis and electrolysis are the common steps in the five-step cycle, the four-step cycle, and the three-step cycle configuration 1 yielding the highest component-associated environmental impact rates and environmental impact rates of energy transfer, respectively. Conversely, in the three-step cycle configuration 2, the electrolysis and thermal decomposition steps yield the highest corresponding values, respectively. In addition, the three-step cycle configuration 2 (4,869 mPts/h) and the five-step cycle (3,194 mPts/h) have the highest and the lowest component-associated environmental impact rates, respectively while the five-step (530,694 mPts/h) and the four-step (248,050 mPts/h) cycles result in the highest and the lowest environmental impact rates of energy transfer, respectively.
Keywords: Sustainable hydrogen; Copper-chlorine; Thermochemical; Exergoenvironmental; Global warming (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:energy:v:300:y:2024:i:c:s0360544224013392
DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2024.131566
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