Biogas is produced by the decomposition of organic matter: it is made of methane, CO2, and other impurities depending on the biogas source. It can be produced in digesters, fed with agricultural wastes for example, in Waste Water Treatment Plants (WWTP), or in landfills. Biogas can then be transformed into energy either in internal combustion engines coupled with an alternator, thus producing electricity. It can also be upgraded and transformed into Renewable Natural Gas (RNG), displacing volumes of fossil natural gas when injected into the Natural Gas (NG) pipelines. This second path of valorization is much more efficient on an energy basis, as it allows to recover more than 90% of the energy contained in the raw gas, compared to 35% in the case of electricity production (no heat valorization). RNG is more and more seen as an effective way to decarbonize transportation, and more generally to decarbonize all the use of NG.
In accordance with embodiments. a facility for producing gaseous biomethane by purifying biogas from landfill can include a a compression unit for compressing an initial gas flow of the biogas to be purified, a VOC purification unit arranged downstream of the compression unit to receive the compressed initial flow of the biogas and comprising at least one adsorber loaded with adsorbents capable of reversibly adsorbing VOCs to thereby produce a VOC-depleted gas flow; at least one membrane arranged downstream of the VOC purification unit to receive the VOC-depleted gas flow and subject the VOC-depleted gas flow to at least one membrane separation, a CO2 purification unit arranged downstream of the membrane to receive a retentate from the membrane, wherein the CO2 purification unit comprises at least one adsorber loaded with adsorbents capable of reversibly adsorbing the majority of remaining CO2 from the retentate to produce a CO2-depleted gas flow; a cryodistillation unit comprising a heat exchanger and a distillation column, arranged downstream of the CO2 purification unit to receive the CO2-depleted gas flow and subject the CO2-depleted gas flow to a cryogenic separation to separate O2 and N2 from the CO2-depleted gas flow and to produce a gas distillate. The facility can optionally include a grid compressor. The facility can also include a deoxo arranged downstream the cryodistillation unit to receive the gas distillate from the distillation column capable of converting the O2 present in the gas distillate into CO2 and H2O to produce an O2 depleted gas flow, and a dryer, f a TSA (Temperature Swing Adsorption) arranged downstream the deoxo to receive the O2 depleted gas flow capable of removing H2O from the O2 depleted gas flow.
The most important sources of biogas are landfills, but the biogas produced is highly polluted: the methane must be separated from CO2, H2S, VOC, siloxanes, and air gases (oxygen and nitrogen) prior pipe injection. Wagabox® is a breakthrough technology to transform the raw landfill gas, into clean RNG: the said technology is depicted in the patent FR-B-3046086 (U.S. patent application US2019/0001263). This process and corresponding facility has multiple steps to remove the impurities:
Cryodistillation is the most efficient process to separate nitrogen & oxygen from methane, and this technology has been patented by the applicant as well (FR-B-3051892).
Depending on the countries, or on the states in the case of USA, the gas grid specifications, which specify the quality the RNG shall comply, differ. This is particularly true when it comes to oxygen content in the RNG: depending on the grid owners, it can vary from 1% vol (10,000 ppmv) down to 10 ppmv.
This is a major technical challenge, even for best-in-class technologies like the Wagabox®. A target of 1,000 ppmv of O2 in the RNG can easily be reached with the Wagabox®, but lower oxygen specification would require excessive work from the distillation, leading to excessive loss of methane from the process.
In this case, the solution consists in adding a deoxo and a TSA that will remove oxygen from the RNG, downstream the cold box. In a deoxo, oxygen is converted into CO2 and H2O, by a classical combustion with the methane:
CH4+2.O2→CO2+2.H2O
This reaction is generally made on a catalyst, in order to lower the reaction temperature. Then, the moisture (H2O) can easily be removed with a TSA (Temperature Swing Adsorption). In the TSA, water is removed on a dedicated adsorbent in a bottle, while the other bottle is heat regenerated.
There are multiple benefits in coupling a deoxo and a TSA with a Wagabox®, in case of very stringent specifications:
There are few locations for the deoxo and TSA dryer:
Solution 1: in between the membrane unit and the PTSA unit. In this arrangement, CO2 is removed in the PTSA prior the cold box. The flow treated is more important as it contains the vent gas of the distillation (and not only the RNG), and deoxo may have to face with impurities at membrane outlet.
Solution 2: downstream distillation, but upstream grid gas compressor: the deoxo and TSA operates at low pressure. The RNG is very clean and contains no oil at all, so no risk of polluting the deoxo.
Solution 3: downstream grid compressor (as featured in the
In accordance with embodiments. a facility for producing gaseous biomethane by purifying biogas from landfill can include a compression unit for compressing an initial gas flow of the biogas to be purified, a VOC purification unit arranged downstream of the compression unit to receive the compressed initial flow of the biogas and comprising at least one adsorber loaded with adsorbents capable of reversibly adsorbing VOCs to thereby produce a VOC-depleted gas flow; at least one membrane arranged downstream of the VOC purification unit to receive the VOC-depleted gas flow and subject the VOC-depleted gas flow to at least one membrane separation, a CO2 purification unit arranged downstream of the membrane to receive a retentate from the membrane, wherein the CO2 purification unit comprises at least one adsorber loaded with adsorbents capable of reversibly adsorbing the majority of remaining CO2 from the retentate to produce a CO2-depleted gas flow; a cryodistillation unit comprising a heat exchanger and a distillation column, arranged downstream of the CO2 purification unit to receive the CO2-depleted gas flow and subject the CO2-depleted gas flow to a cryogenic separation to separate O2 and N2 from the CO2-depleted gas flow and to produce a gas distillate. The facility can optionally include a grid compressor. The facility can also include a deoxo arranged downstream the cryodistillation unit to receive the gas distillate from the distillation column capable of converting the O2 present in the gas distillate into CO2 and H2O to produce an O2 depleted gas flow, and a dryer, f a TSA (Temperature Swing Adsorption) arranged downstream the deoxo to receive the O2 depleted gas flow capable of removing H2O from the O2 depleted gas flow.