Skip to content
1900

Catalysts for Unlocking H2 Production from NH3: A Process Design Perspective

Abstract

NH3 cracking is gaining attention as a promising route for on-demand, carbon-free H2 production, particularly in off-grid or distributed energy applications. Nevertheless, its practical implementation hinges on the development of catalysts not only highly active, but also cost-effective and thermally efficient. Starting from the state-of-theart catalyst for NH3 decomposition (nickel-based), the most promising catalytic systems (ruthenium-based) are critically reviewed, with a focus on the interplay between catalyst activation energy, thermal duty and operating conditions. In view of discussing whether the implementation of noble-based catalysts can be practical or not, a technical analysis of the cracking furnace with different Ru-based catalytic systems is presented, referring to a decentralized application representative of compact yet industrially relevant units. The trade-off between technical and economic performance is quantified, with the aim of offering design guidelines for developing scalable NH3 cracking.

Related subjects: Production & Supply Chain
Countries: Italy
Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journal8238
2025-11-04
2026-03-15

Metrics

/content/journal8238
Loading
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error
Please enter a valid_number test