Home
Scholarly Works
Polygeneration of fuels and chemicals
Journal article

Polygeneration of fuels and chemicals

Abstract

Research advances in the rapidly growing field of polygeneration are highlighted. Although ‘polygeneration’ has had many meanings, the chemical engineering community has overwhelmingly settled on a meaning which describes a process that co-produces at least two products: electricity, and at least one chemical or fuel via a thermochemical route that does not rely on petroleum. The production of syngas is almost always the primary intermediate for energy conversion, but the feeds, products, technologies, and pathways vary widely. However, the choice of the most optimal polygeneration system is highly dependent on circumstance, and often results in systems with only one fuel or chemical co-produced with electricity. Conversely, the synergistic use of multiple types of feedstocks can have important profitability benefits.

Authors

Adams TA; Ghouse JH

Journal

Current Opinion in Chemical Engineering, Vol. 10, , pp. 87–93

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

November 1, 2015

DOI

10.1016/j.coche.2015.09.006

ISSN

2211-3398

Labels

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

Contact the Experts team