Student engineers sweetening the deal on clean energy

Chemical engineering students from the University of Queensland (UQ) have helped investigate how sugarcane could be used as a clean energy source to create hydrogen.

Professor Damien Batstone of UQ’s Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information

Technology, said bagasse, or sugarcane pulp, and other agricultural residues were an abundant resource that could generate ‘green’ or carbon-negative hydrogen at scale.

Biomass from crushed sugarcane stalks and leaves could also potentially produce hydrogen for under $3 per kilogram, one third of the cost of current options, he added.

Last year, 150 students in 36 teams were tasked with designing a process to produce hydrogen gas from bagasse with either thermal gasification or hydrothermal gasification as their process.

Generating pure hydrogen

Caitlin Welsh, a chemical and materials engineer who has a Bachelor of Engineering (Hons) from UQ, and her team, were responsible for designing a thermal gasification process for an input of 2000 t/day of bagasse.

“I was allocated the pre-treatment node where I was required to design units to heat and dry the bagasse in preparation for gasification,” she said.

“Part of my role was to ensure the bagasse was pre-treated to ensure highest possible efficiency. I needed to do this while ensuring the pre-treatment node did not counter the energy savings in the gasifier.

“So, I applied energy integration in my design by utilising steam produced downstream in my pre-treatment for heating of bagasse.”

Welsh, who is currently working at Visy Board as a graduate engineer, said that, with thermal gasification, there will always be by-products such as ash, tar, carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide gas.

“The hydrogen can, however, be extracted and the by-products captured in the downstream process,” she said.

Eva I Iong Lam, who also has a Bachelor of Engineering (Hons) from UQ, and her team were involved in the cutting-edge hydrothermal gasification process.

“It is similar to that of thermal gasification, except it involves wet biomass,” she said.

“Not only does it save energy in the drying of bagasse, but it also allows for lower operating temperatures with the possibilities to utilise a variety of biomasses as feedstocks.”

A graduate chemical engineer who now works at Engeny Water Management, I Iong Lam said the slurry was fed into the reactor, then produced a supercritical fluid where its heat energy was integrated with other processing units through a series of heat exchangers.

“Hydrogen is produced more readily under supercritical water conditions in this process,” she said.

“The gases were then separated by chemisorption using Methyldiethanolamine (MDEA) solvent.”

The models she created were also able to recover the majority of water present in the gas streams using flash tanks, so it could be repurposed within the plant.

“A key challenge was the limited availability of materials that could withstand high temperatures and pressures,” I Iong Lam said.

“I chose stainless steel 316 as the construction material for a flash tank receiving supercritical fluids as it has excellent resistance to corrosion, thermal and pressure stress.”

A future biomass technology

While gasification has been widely applied to coal processing, it has not been applied to hydrogen production from biomass at large scale, Batstone said.

“This offers an alternative pathway with potential for higher profits for canegrowers, and for sugarcane to be used in ethanol and plastic production, while fully utilising the biomass residues,” he said.

Welsh hopes that her career will include further involvement in sustainable engineering solutions, while I Iong Lam wants to continue to focus on water consulting.

“You get clean water by just turning on a tap, we never really spend a moment to appreciate the processes and people behind it,” she said. “Now, I am hoping to make a positive difference to the community I live in.”.

To develop the work done by the students, a future project by UQ will involve growers, sugar companies and likely end-users and include governments investing in a hydrogen economy.

 

SOURCE: https://createdigital.org.au/student-engineers-sugarcane-hydrogen/

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