CO2 Emission Reduction through Innovative Molten Salt Electrolysis Technologies Using Inert Anodes

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Diyong Tang Huayi Yin Wei Xiao Xuhui Mao Wang. Dihua
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
8
File Size:
378 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2014

Abstract

"The world production of crude steel reached 1.55 billion tons in 2012,which generated ~2.5 billion tons of CO2. Electrochemical metallurgy especially through high temperature molten salt electrolysis with renewable electricity stands for a great opportunity for producing “green” metals. In recent years, electrolytic production of iron without emission of CO2 in different molten salt systems has been reported. A cost-affordable inert anode is the key to produce acceptable eco-friendly iron by the novel molten salt electrolysis processes. Based on the authors’ research, this paper will discuss iron production by molten salt electrolysis using a nickel alloy inert anode. On the other hand, the paper also covers a novel molten salt CO2 capture and electrochemical transformation (MSCC-ET) process, in which CO2 is effectively converted to value-added carbon and oxygen in a molten bath using a cost-affordable nonconsumable SnO2 anode.1. IntroductionEnergy and materials are cornerstones to support the development of human society. The traditional primary metal production, especially iron and steel, and electricity production are mainly based on the reactions between carbon (coal) and oxygen (represented by equations (1) and (2) respectively), which produce huge amount of CO2.MxOy + 0.5y C = x M + 0.5y CO2 (g) + Q1 ( 1 )C + O2 (g) = CO2 (g) + Q2 ( 2 )In 2012, the world production of crude steel reached 1.55 billion tons, of which 46.3 %, ~0.7165 billion tons were produced in China. Based on the average level of 1.7t CO2 emission per ton steel, more than 1 billion tons of CO2 generated from steel industry in China in the year. Besides the iron and steel industry, thermal power plant leads the CO2 emission in both USA and China. The total consumed electricity in China increased to 4959 billion kWh in 2012, ~70% of it was from coal fired power plant. The average CO2 emission for electricity production in the typical thermal power plant in China is around 0.78 kg kWh-1. It accounts for ~ 3.868 billion tons of CO2 emission from thermal power plant in 2012 in China."
Citation

APA: Diyong Tang Huayi Yin Wei Xiao Xuhui Mao Wang. Dihua  (2014)  CO2 Emission Reduction through Innovative Molten Salt Electrolysis Technologies Using Inert Anodes

MLA: Diyong Tang Huayi Yin Wei Xiao Xuhui Mao Wang. Dihua CO2 Emission Reduction through Innovative Molten Salt Electrolysis Technologies Using Inert Anodes. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2014.

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