Abstract

This study addresses the solar thermal dissociation of CO 2 and H 2O by two-step thermochemical looping using Fe 3O 4/FeO redox system. The reactions produce clean H 2 and/or CO and the only process inputs are abundant and low-cost H 2O and CO 2 feedstock with no heating value combined with high-temperature solar heat to drive the endothermic reactions. The produced syngas can serve as the precursor to a renewable synthetic liquid fuel. Solar concentrated energy is thus used to reenergize H 2O and captured CO 2 for ultimately reversing combustion. The two-step process consists of (1) the solar thermal reduction of iron(II,III) oxide to FeO and O 2 in a high-temperature solar chemical reactor heated by concentrated solar energy; and (2) the H 2O/CO 2 splitting with the solar-produced FeO to generate H 2/CO, respectively; the resulting Fe 3O 4 being indefinitely recycled to the first step. The CO 2 and H 2O splitting reactions with the synthesized FeO-rich material were investigated in the range 600–800 °C with a thermobalance and with a packed bed of reactive particles enclosed in a tubular reactor, which showed that nearly complete FeO conversion could be reached. The powder reactivity was analyzed as a function of the reactant (CO 2 and/or H 2O), the temperature, and the material composition. A concept of the solar reactor technology was finally developed and experimentally tested in batch mode operation for the thermal reduction of Fe 3O 4. The rotary cavity-type reactor was operated under controlled atmosphere at about 1600 °C with a liquid phase of iron oxide subjected to thermal reduction.

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