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Thermodynamic evaluation of the effects of hydrogen blending on the Joule-Thomson characteristics of hydrogen-blended natural gas.

Authors :
Li, Zhuoran
Zhang, Caigong
Li, Changjun
Wu, Xia
Xie, Hanyu
Jiang, Linyu
Source :
Journal of Cleaner Production. Jun2023, Vol. 406, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Joule-Thomson characteristics of hydrogen-blended natural gas (HBNG) differ from those of natural gas for the differences in properties, deserving a profound study. We foremost analyzed the effects of hydrogen on the properties of HBNG using the Soave-Benedict-Webb-Rubin (BWRS) equation of state (EOS) owing to its lowest deviation among the concerned EOSs. Based on BWRS EOS, the fundamental differential equation, and the isenthalpic equation, we developed a thermodynamic model to evaluate the effects of hydrogen on the isenthalpic curve, Joule-Thomson coefficient (JTC), and Joule-Thomson inversion curve (JTIC) of HBNG within the hydrogen mole fraction (x -H 2) range of 30%. The average absolute relative deviation (AARD) for the isenthalpic curve of the N 2 -H 2 mixture and the JTC of natural gas is 0.02% and 1.62%. We mainly discussed how hydrogen affects the isenthalpic curve, JTC, and JTIC of HBNG. The isenthalpic curve of the CH 4 -H 2 mixture and HBNG rise in a descending gradient with increasing x -H 2. Compared to natural gas, the JTC of HBNG decreases (about 48% when x -H 2 is 30%) and negatively correlates to x -H 2 , pressure, and temperature in a nonlinear function. The JTC is more sensitive to the x -H 2 at higher temperatures and lower pressures. The blended hydrogen narrows the positive effect region of HBNG but does not turn the positive effect into a negative one within the x -H 2 range of 30%. When x -H 2 increases from 0% to 30%, the maximum inversion pressure and corresponding temperature drop at a rate of 0.227 MPa/ x -H 2 % (roughly linear) and 4.9385 K/ x -H 2 % (linear), respectively. • The effects of hydrogen on the isenthalpic curve weaken with increasing x -H 2. • Compared to natural gas, the JTC of HBNG decreases and negatively correlates to x -H 2 , pressure, and temperature in a nonlinear function. • The JTC of HBNG is more sensitive to the x -H 2 at higher temperatures and lower pressures. • Hydrogen narrows the positive effect region of HBNG but does not turn the positive effect to negative within x -H 2 of 30%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09596526
Volume :
406
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Cleaner Production
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163308241
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.137074