Technical, economic and environmental analysis of solar thermochemical production of drop-in fuels
Abstract
This study analyzes the technical performance, costs and life-cycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of the production of various fuels using air-captured water and CO2, and concentrated solar energy as the source of high-temperature process heat. The solar thermochemical fuel production pathway utilizes a ceria-based redox cycle for splitting water and CO2 to syngas ‒ a tailored mixture of H2 and CO ‒ which in turn is further converted to liquid hydrocarbon fuels. The cycle is driven by concentrated solar heat and supplemented by a high-temperature thermal energy storage for round-the-clock continuous operation. The study examines three locations with high direct normal irradiation using a baseline heliostat field reflective area of 1 km2 for the production of six fuels, i.e. jet fuel and diesel via Fischer-Tropsch, methanol, gasoline via methanol, dimethyl ether, and hydrogen. Two scenarios are considered: near-term future by the year 2030 and long-term future beyond 2030.
In the near-term future in Sierra Gorda (Chile), the minimum fuel selling price is estimated at around 76 €/GJ (2.5 €/L) for jet fuel and diesel, 65 €/GJ for methanol, gasoline (via methanol) and dimethyl ether (DME), and 42 €/GJ for hydrogen. In the long-term future, with advancements in solar receiver, redox reactor, high-temperature heat recovery and direct air capture technologies, the industrial-scale plant could achieve a solar-to-fuel efficiency up to 13-19%, depending on the target fuel, resulting in a minimum fuel selling price of 16-38 €/GJ (0.6-1.3 €/L) for jet fuel and diesel, and 14-32 €/GJ for methanol, gasoline, and DME, making these fuels synthetized from sunlight and air cost-competitive vis-à-vis e-fuels. To produce the same fuels in Tabernas (Spain) and Ouarzazate (Morocco) as in Sierra Gorda, the production cost would increase by 22-33%. Greenhouse gas savings can be over 80% already in the near-term future. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000625467External links
Journal / series
Science of The Total EnvironmentVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
ElsevierSubject
Solar fuels; Life cycle assessment (LCA); direct air capture (DAC); Solar thermochemical conversion; Solar thermochemical splitting; Redox reactions; Renewable fuels; sustainable aviation fuel (SAF)Organisational unit
09451 - Patt, Anthony G. / Patt, Anthony G.
03530 - Steinfeld, Aldo / Steinfeld, Aldo
02261 - Center for Sustainable Future Mobility / Center for Sustainable Future Mobility
09451 - Patt, Anthony G. / Patt, Anthony G.
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