Case Studies in Thermal Engineering (Aug 2024)
Lab-scale validation and parametric numerical investigation on hydrogen production in a porous media as a byproduct of in-situ combustion
Abstract
A numerical 1D model was developed and validated using the measured data on a porous tube lab experiment for hydrogen generation as an in-situ combustion (ISC) byproduct, and a detailed parametric numerical study was performed. This work explores the impacts of various water injection parameters on the generation of hydrogen, the oil recovery factor (ORF), and carbon monoxide using a thorough parametric analysis. The methodology included simulating the injection of mutually enriched air and water into the combustion tube, focusing on parameters such as water temperature, quality, and flow rates. Key findings reveal that the oxygen ratio in the oxidizer substantially influences hydrogen production and ORF, with hydrogen generation increasing from 1.65 × 103 cm3 to 3.0 × 103 cm3, which is around 82 % when the oxygen percentage is raised from 50 % to 95 %. The results showed that employing wet combustion instead of dry combustion increased the hydrogen production rate by roughly four times. Variable water temperature has insignificant impacts on the hydrogen production rate and ORF. Increasing the steam quality has an opposed effect on the hydrogen generation rate. Additionally, escalating the injected water flow rate from 3000 cm³/day to 15000 cm³/day boosts hydrogen production from 10000 cm³ to 53400 cm³, respectively.