The direct dehydrogenation of butane (BDH) is emerging as an attractive on-purpose technology for the direct production of 1,3-butadine. However, its product yield is hindered by the high rate of carbon deposition associated to the high temperature required for the highly endothermic reaction. In this work, we evaluated the use of H-2-selective membrane reactor, to increase the yield of the dehydrogenation process at milder operating conditions. The novel proposed membrane reactor (MR)-assisted BDH technology is compared from a techno-economic point of view with the benchmark technology. The results of this analysis reveal that the MR technology enables to work at milder operating temperatures (-85 degrees C), reducing carbon formation (-98.5%) and reactor duty (-10%). Due to the higher reaction yields, the MR-assisted BDH technology can lower the required shale gas-based feedstock, maintaining same production capacity as in the benchmark; this will result in an overall plant efficiency of 50.92% in the MR-assisted plant, compared to 37.7% of the benchmark case. This work demonstrates that MR-assisted technology is a valuable alternative to the conventional BDH technology, reducing of almost 20% the final cost of production of 1,3-butadiene, due to the lower installation costs and the higher energy efficiency.
Butadiene production in membrane reactors: A techno-economic analysis
Manzolini, Giampaolo;
2022-01-01
Abstract
The direct dehydrogenation of butane (BDH) is emerging as an attractive on-purpose technology for the direct production of 1,3-butadine. However, its product yield is hindered by the high rate of carbon deposition associated to the high temperature required for the highly endothermic reaction. In this work, we evaluated the use of H-2-selective membrane reactor, to increase the yield of the dehydrogenation process at milder operating conditions. The novel proposed membrane reactor (MR)-assisted BDH technology is compared from a techno-economic point of view with the benchmark technology. The results of this analysis reveal that the MR technology enables to work at milder operating temperatures (-85 degrees C), reducing carbon formation (-98.5%) and reactor duty (-10%). Due to the higher reaction yields, the MR-assisted BDH technology can lower the required shale gas-based feedstock, maintaining same production capacity as in the benchmark; this will result in an overall plant efficiency of 50.92% in the MR-assisted plant, compared to 37.7% of the benchmark case. This work demonstrates that MR-assisted technology is a valuable alternative to the conventional BDH technology, reducing of almost 20% the final cost of production of 1,3-butadiene, due to the lower installation costs and the higher energy efficiency.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
1-s2.0-S0360319922018808-main.pdf
accesso aperto
:
Publisher’s version
Dimensione
2.24 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
2.24 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


