2025 - Sustainable Industrial Processing Summit
SIPS2025 Volume 9. Intl. Symp on Advanced Materials, Biomaterials, Manufacturing and Quasi-Crystals

Editors:F. Kongoli, F. Marquis, N. Chikhradze, T. Prikhna, M. Bechelany, H. Oudadesse, K. Pramanik, R. Das, E. Suhir
Publisher:Flogen Star OUTREACH
Publication Year:2025
Pages:282 pages
ISBN:978-1-998384-54-9 (CD)
ISSN:2291-1227 (Metals and Materials Processing in a Clean Environment Series)
CD-SIPS2025_Volume1
CD shopping page

    PRODUCTION OF HYDROGEN AND CARBON BY METHANE PYROLYSIS IN LIQUID METALS

    David Scheiblehner1; Christoph Scherr1; Helmut Antrekowitsch1;
    1TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF LEOBEN, Leoben, Austria;
    Type of Paper: Keynote
    Id Paper: 129
    Topic: 43

    Abstract:

    Hydrogen is increasingly recognized as a critical vector in decarbonizing industrial energy systems. Its utilization as a fuel and reducing agent in sectors such as metallurgy and chemical processing has the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance energy system resilience significantly [1]. However, conventional hydrogen production, e.g., via steam methane reforming, is associated with substantial CO2 emissions, necessitating the development of more ecological alternatives [1]–[4].

    Methane pyrolysis in metallic melts has emerged as a promising route for CO2-free hydrogen generation [3], [5]. In this process, methane is decomposed in an oxygen-free atmosphere in the presence of a liquid-metal catalyst to form solid carbon and gaseous hydrogen [3], [5]. The process operates at a comparable specific energy demand to steam methane reforming but circumvents direct carbon dioxide formation [3], [4]. The pyrolytic carbon produced constitutes a potentially valuable co-product whose physicochemical properties strongly influence its marketability and the overall economic viability of the process [4].

    This study focuses on the specific energy demand of methane pyrolysis in molten metals, combining theoretical analysis with experimental findings. The influence of the nitrogen and methane inputs on energy consumption is investigated in laboratory scale-ups. The results enable a comparison with conventional hydrogen production routes and provide critical insights for designing integrated methane pyrolysis systems aimed at sustainable hydrogen and carbon co-production.

    Keywords:

    Hydrogen production; Carbon production; Methane pyrolysis

    Full Text:

    Click here to access the Full Text

    Cite this article as:

    Scheiblehner D, Scherr C, Antrekowitsch H. (2024). PRODUCTION OF HYDROGEN AND CARBON BY METHANE PYROLYSIS IN LIQUID METALS. In F. Kongoli, F. Marquis, N. Chikhradze, T. Prikhna, M. Bechelany, H. Oudadesse, K. Pramanik, R. Das, E. Suhir (Eds.), Sustainable Industrial Processing Summit Volume 9 Intl. Symp on Advanced Materials, Biomaterials, Manufacturing and Quasi-Crystals (pp. 139-148). Montreal, Canada: FLOGEN Star Outreach