Use of Ceramic Materials for the Adsorptive Storage of Natural Gas – a Review, Part 1

Natural gas currently is gaining a worldwide acceptance as an economical fuel for vehicles and other applications. Even from the environmental point of view, natural gas performs better than gasoline and diesel. However, the storage of natural gas is considered one of the major bottlenecks towar...

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Main Author: Eldemerdash, Usama
Format: Article
Institution: Universiti Teknologi Petronas
Record Id / ISBN-0: utp-eprints.3002 /
Published: 2010
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Online Access: http://eprints.utp.edu.my/3002/1/198-202_HPC_Nour_Part_1.pdf
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/3002/
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spelling utp-eprints.30022017-03-20T01:59:57Z Use of Ceramic Materials for the Adsorptive Storage of Natural Gas – a Review, Part 1 Eldemerdash, Usama TP Chemical technology QD Chemistry TL Motor vehicles. Aeronautics. Astronautics Natural gas currently is gaining a worldwide acceptance as an economical fuel for vehicles and other applications. Even from the environmental point of view, natural gas performs better than gasoline and diesel. However, the storage of natural gas is considered one of the major bottlenecks toward its widespread application. The adsorptive storage of natural gas (ANG) is a promising alternative to the traditional, expensive storage by compression [i.e., compressed natural gas (CNG)]. However, ANG suffers from many techno-economic problems. In many countries (e.g., USA, China), a large effort has been made toward the replacement of high-pressure compression by an alternative method of storage suitable for working at pressures up to 500 psi (3.4 MPa). This upper limit of pressure easily can be achieved with a single-stage compressor. Alternatively, the vehicle can be refueled directly from a high-pressure natural gas pipeline. In this way, a significant decrease in the capital and operating costs of compression stations can be achieved. Due to its relatively low pressure, ANG obviously has some advantages according to weight, shape, safety, and costs of the storage vessel. In the future, ceramic adsorbent materials such as silica gel, activated alumina, zeolite, or silicon carbide may play an important role in ANG technology. In this review, a comparison of activated carbon as a traditional adsorbent as well as new ceramic adsorbents is discussed for the storage of natural gas. 2010 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf http://eprints.utp.edu.my/3002/1/198-202_HPC_Nour_Part_1.pdf Eldemerdash, Usama (2010) Use of Ceramic Materials for the Adsorptive Storage of Natural Gas – a Review, Part 1. Interceram, 03 (04). pp. 198-202. http://eprints.utp.edu.my/3002/
institution Universiti Teknologi Petronas
collection UTP Institutional Repository
topic TP Chemical technology
QD Chemistry
TL Motor vehicles. Aeronautics. Astronautics
spellingShingle TP Chemical technology
QD Chemistry
TL Motor vehicles. Aeronautics. Astronautics
Eldemerdash, Usama
Use of Ceramic Materials for the Adsorptive Storage of Natural Gas – a Review, Part 1
description Natural gas currently is gaining a worldwide acceptance as an economical fuel for vehicles and other applications. Even from the environmental point of view, natural gas performs better than gasoline and diesel. However, the storage of natural gas is considered one of the major bottlenecks toward its widespread application. The adsorptive storage of natural gas (ANG) is a promising alternative to the traditional, expensive storage by compression [i.e., compressed natural gas (CNG)]. However, ANG suffers from many techno-economic problems. In many countries (e.g., USA, China), a large effort has been made toward the replacement of high-pressure compression by an alternative method of storage suitable for working at pressures up to 500 psi (3.4 MPa). This upper limit of pressure easily can be achieved with a single-stage compressor. Alternatively, the vehicle can be refueled directly from a high-pressure natural gas pipeline. In this way, a significant decrease in the capital and operating costs of compression stations can be achieved. Due to its relatively low pressure, ANG obviously has some advantages according to weight, shape, safety, and costs of the storage vessel. In the future, ceramic adsorbent materials such as silica gel, activated alumina, zeolite, or silicon carbide may play an important role in ANG technology. In this review, a comparison of activated carbon as a traditional adsorbent as well as new ceramic adsorbents is discussed for the storage of natural gas.
format Article
author Eldemerdash, Usama
author_sort Eldemerdash, Usama
title Use of Ceramic Materials for the Adsorptive Storage of Natural Gas – a Review, Part 1
title_short Use of Ceramic Materials for the Adsorptive Storage of Natural Gas – a Review, Part 1
title_full Use of Ceramic Materials for the Adsorptive Storage of Natural Gas – a Review, Part 1
title_fullStr Use of Ceramic Materials for the Adsorptive Storage of Natural Gas – a Review, Part 1
title_full_unstemmed Use of Ceramic Materials for the Adsorptive Storage of Natural Gas – a Review, Part 1
title_sort use of ceramic materials for the adsorptive storage of natural gas – a review, part 1
publishDate 2010
url http://eprints.utp.edu.my/3002/1/198-202_HPC_Nour_Part_1.pdf
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/3002/
_version_ 1741196064989380608
score 11.62408