Sustainable Ammonia Production Processes

Due to the important role of ammonia as a fertilizer in the agricultural industry and its promising prospects as an energy carrier, many studies have recently attempted to find the most environmentally benign, energy efficient, and economically viable production process for ammonia synthesis. The mo...

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Main Authors: Seyedehhoma Ghavam, Maria Vahdati, I. A. Grant Wilson, Peter Styring
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Energy Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenrg.2021.580808/full
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spelling doaj-e1d7fa0034a64cf48fb95bc0f78887072021-03-29T13:25:26ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Energy Research2296-598X2021-03-01910.3389/fenrg.2021.580808580808Sustainable Ammonia Production ProcessesSeyedehhoma Ghavam0Maria Vahdati1I. A. Grant Wilson2Peter Styring3Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, Uinted KingdomSchool of Construction Management and Engineering, University of Reading, Reading, Uinted KingdomSchool of Chemical Engineering, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, Uinted KingdomDepartment of Chemical and Biological Engineering, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, Uinted KingdomDue to the important role of ammonia as a fertilizer in the agricultural industry and its promising prospects as an energy carrier, many studies have recently attempted to find the most environmentally benign, energy efficient, and economically viable production process for ammonia synthesis. The most commonly utilized ammonia production method is the Haber-Bosch process. The downside to this technology is the high greenhouse gas emissions, surpassing 2.16 kgCO2-eq/kg NH3 and high amounts of energy usage of over 30 GJ/tonne NH3 mainly due to the strict operational conditions at high temperature and pressure. The most widely adopted technology for sustainable hydrogen production used for ammonia synthesis is water electrolysis coupled with renewable technologies such as wind and solar. In general, a water electrolyzer requires a continuous supply of pretreated water with high purity levels for its operation. Moreover, for production of 1 tonne of hydrogen, 9 tonnes of water is required. Based on this data, for the production of the same amount of ammonia through water electrolysis, 233.6 million tonnes/yr of water is required. In this paper, a critical review of different sustainable hydrogen production processes and emerging technologies for sustainable ammonia synthesis along with a comparative life cycle assessment of various ammonia production methods has been carried out. We find that through the review of each of the studied technologies, either large amounts of GHG emissions are produced or high volumes of pretreated water is required or a combination of both these factors occur.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenrg.2021.580808/fullammonia productionfertilizerenergy carriersustainable hydrogen productionHaber-Boschwater intensity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seyedehhoma Ghavam
Maria Vahdati
I. A. Grant Wilson
Peter Styring
spellingShingle Seyedehhoma Ghavam
Maria Vahdati
I. A. Grant Wilson
Peter Styring
Sustainable Ammonia Production Processes
Frontiers in Energy Research
ammonia production
fertilizer
energy carrier
sustainable hydrogen production
Haber-Bosch
water intensity
author_facet Seyedehhoma Ghavam
Maria Vahdati
I. A. Grant Wilson
Peter Styring
author_sort Seyedehhoma Ghavam
title Sustainable Ammonia Production Processes
title_short Sustainable Ammonia Production Processes
title_full Sustainable Ammonia Production Processes
title_fullStr Sustainable Ammonia Production Processes
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable Ammonia Production Processes
title_sort sustainable ammonia production processes
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Energy Research
issn 2296-598X
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Due to the important role of ammonia as a fertilizer in the agricultural industry and its promising prospects as an energy carrier, many studies have recently attempted to find the most environmentally benign, energy efficient, and economically viable production process for ammonia synthesis. The most commonly utilized ammonia production method is the Haber-Bosch process. The downside to this technology is the high greenhouse gas emissions, surpassing 2.16 kgCO2-eq/kg NH3 and high amounts of energy usage of over 30 GJ/tonne NH3 mainly due to the strict operational conditions at high temperature and pressure. The most widely adopted technology for sustainable hydrogen production used for ammonia synthesis is water electrolysis coupled with renewable technologies such as wind and solar. In general, a water electrolyzer requires a continuous supply of pretreated water with high purity levels for its operation. Moreover, for production of 1 tonne of hydrogen, 9 tonnes of water is required. Based on this data, for the production of the same amount of ammonia through water electrolysis, 233.6 million tonnes/yr of water is required. In this paper, a critical review of different sustainable hydrogen production processes and emerging technologies for sustainable ammonia synthesis along with a comparative life cycle assessment of various ammonia production methods has been carried out. We find that through the review of each of the studied technologies, either large amounts of GHG emissions are produced or high volumes of pretreated water is required or a combination of both these factors occur.
topic ammonia production
fertilizer
energy carrier
sustainable hydrogen production
Haber-Bosch
water intensity
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenrg.2021.580808/full
work_keys_str_mv AT seyedehhomaghavam sustainableammoniaproductionprocesses
AT mariavahdati sustainableammoniaproductionprocesses
AT iagrantwilson sustainableammoniaproductionprocesses
AT peterstyring sustainableammoniaproductionprocesses
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