A CFD Design Approach for Industrial Size Tubular Reactors for SNG Production from Biogas (CO<sub>2</sub> Methanation)

A tubular reactor based on the disk and doughnut concept was designed as an engineering solution for biogas upgrading via CO<sub>2</sub> methanation. CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) benchmarks agreed well with experimental and empirical (correlation) data, giving a maximum error of 8....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Victor Soto, Claudia Ulloa, Ximena Garcia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-09-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/14/19/6175
Description
Summary:A tubular reactor based on the disk and doughnut concept was designed as an engineering solution for biogas upgrading via CO<sub>2</sub> methanation. CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) benchmarks agreed well with experimental and empirical (correlation) data, giving a maximum error of 8.5% and 20% for the chemical reaction and heat transfer models, respectively. Likewise, hot spot position was accurately predicted, with a 5% error. The methodology was used to investigate the effect of two commercially available coolants (thermal oil and molten salts) on overall reactor performance through a parametric study involving four coolant flow rates. Although molten salts did show higher heat transfer coefficients at lower coolant rates, 82% superior, it also increases, by five times, the pumping power. A critical coolant flow rate (3.5 m<sup>3</sup>/h) was found, which allows both a stable thermal operation and optimum pumping energy consumption. The adopted coolant flow range remains critical to guarantee thermal design validity in correlation-based studies. Due to the disk and doughnut configuration, coolant flow remains uniform, promoting turbulence (Re ≈ 14,000 at doughnut outlet) and maximizing heat transfer at hot spot. Likewise, baffle positioning was found critical to accommodate and reduce stagnant zones, improving the heat transfer. Finally, a reactor design is presented for SNG (Synthetic Natural Gas) production from a 150 Nm<sup>3</sup> h<sup>−1</sup> biogas plant.
ISSN:1996-1073