Abstract

A high-temperature solar reactor has been developed for co-producing hydrogen-rich gas and high-grade carbon black (CB) from concentrated solar energy and methane. The approach is based on a single-step thermal decomposition (pyrolysis) of methane without catalysts and without emitting carbon dioxide since solid carbon is sequestered. In the tested reactor, a graphite nozzle absorbs concentrated solar radiation provided by a solar furnace. The heat is then transferred to the reactive flow. The experimental setup, first test results, and effect of operating conditions are described in this paper. The conversion of methane was strongly dependant on the solar furnace power input, on the geometry of the graphite nozzle, on gas flow rates, and on the ratio of inert gas-to-reactive gas. CB was recovered in the carbon trap, and maximum chemical conversion of methane-to-hydrogen and CB was 95%, but typical conversion was in the range 30–90%.

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