Title:
World’s First Commercial CO2 to Methanol Plant

dc.contributor.author Richter, Christaan
dc.contributor.corporatename Georgia Institute of Technology. School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering en_US
dc.contributor.corporatename University of Iceland en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2019-09-10T20:22:32Z
dc.date.available 2019-09-10T20:22:32Z
dc.date.issued 2019-08-28
dc.description Presented on August 28, 2019 from 3:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m. in the Molecular Science and Engineering Building (MoSE), Room G011, Georgia Tech. en_US
dc.description Christiaan Richter is a professor in chemical engineering at the University of Iceland in Reykjavik. Prior to relocating to Iceland in 2016 he was a founding faculty member of the chemical engineering program at the Rochester Institute of Technology. He completed a postdoc at Yale, and has a PhD from Northeastern University and an MS & BS from the University of Nebraska. en_US
dc.description Runtime: 53:56 minutes en_US
dc.description.abstract The George Olah CO2 to methanol plant, commissioned in April 2012, currently produces ~ 5 million liters/year renewable methanol and capture and convert up to ~ 5600 ton CO2/year [Lim 2016, Nature, 526(630)]. This Carbon Recycling International (CRI) plant is located in Svartsengi, near Grindavik, Iceland. The process was originally developed by a small CRI team in Reykjavik, and has undergone several iterations to arrive at the present state of technology and functionality. Taking the process from pilot scale to industrial scale was not trivial. Several difficulties encountered along the way were resolved to arrive at the current robust version of the technology. The high purity renewable methanol currently produced is sold as gasoline additive, similar to ethanol in the USA. Perhaps the most consequential lesson learned from this enterprise is that producing methanol from CO2 need not be as expensive as most experts estimated; the production cost of the ‘green methanol’ produced at the George Olah plant is only approximately twice that of natural gas derived methanol. A second interesting lesson involves the optimal process configuration: There exist two viable catalytic routes to convert CO2 to methanol. The most familiar option is to first reduce CO2 to CO through the RWGS reaction and then reduce CO with H2 to methanol in a second step or reactor. The CRI process instead implements the direct hydrogenation of CO2 with H2 over a mixed metal oxide catalyst. The presentation will include a brief history of the R&D and early development of the process, followed by a discussion of selected process features. Currently two world-wide implementation opportunities are actively pursued, namely the transformation of stranded H2 into a liquid commodity and a combined CCU and energy storage option for intermittent renewables. The presentation will conclude with a motivation for the ongoing research addressing the main barriers to bringing renewable CO2-derived methanol even closer to becoming cost competitive with refinery CH4-derived methanol. en_US
dc.format.extent 53:56 minutes
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1853/61845
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Georgia Institute of Technology en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Seminar Series en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Seminar Series
dc.subject Carbon utilization en_US
dc.subject CO2 en_US
dc.subject Methanol en_US
dc.title World’s First Commercial CO2 to Methanol Plant en_US
dc.type Moving Image
dc.type.genre Lecture
dspace.entity.type Publication
local.contributor.corporatename School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
local.contributor.corporatename College of Engineering
local.relation.ispartofseries School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Seminar Series
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication 6cfa2dc6-c5bf-4f6b-99a2-57105d8f7a6f
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication 7c022d60-21d5-497c-b552-95e489a06569
relation.isSeriesOfPublication 388050f3-0f40-4192-9168-e4b7de4367b4
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