Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Jesús González-Rebordinos"'
Publikováno v:
Chemical Engineering Research and Design. 140:283-291
Current combustion of fossil fuels for energy production is the largest anthropogenic source of CO2, a greenhouse gas that is regularly emitted into the atmosphere causing a steady increase in global average temperatures. The BrOx (bromination–oxid
Publikováno v:
Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research. 57:17111-17118
Hydrogen bromide (HBr) oxidation is an important part of the bromination–oxidation cycle for CO2-free energy production, being the most exothermic reaction step. Although high temperatures favor reaction kinetics, equilibrium conversion decreases a
Publikováno v:
Energy. 133:327-337
The BrOx (Bromination-Oxidation) cycle is a novel process that enables energy generation from natural gas without concomitant CO2 emissions. The cycle's main units are two exothermic reactions and two separation steps that result in an overall proces
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy. 42:4710-4720
Currently, the combustion of fossil fuels is the major anthropogenic source of CO 2 and the main reason for the significant increase in its atmospheric concentration over the past decades. Despite the increase in fossil fuel consumption in recent yea
Combustion monitoring in an industrial cracking furnace based on combined CFD and optical techniques
Autor:
Francisco Brunet, Cristóbal Cortés, Antonia Gil, Carlos Herce, Alfred Arias, Ana González-Espinosa, Miguel Gil, Jesús González-Rebordinos, Teresa Guégués, Laura Ferré
Publikováno v:
Fuel. 280:118502
Ethylene is one of the most important building blocks of current chemical industry with a global production of 150 million tons in 2016. Most ethylene nowadays is produced via thermal cracking with steam of fossil feedstocks in cracking furnaces. Thi
Autor:
Francisco Brunet, Cristóbal Cortés, Ana González-Espinosa, Alfred Arias, Carlos Herce, Laura Ferré, Jesús González Rebordinos, Miguel Gil
Publikováno v:
Applied Thermal Engineering. 162:114206
Ethylene is one of the most important building blocks of current chemical industry with a global production of 150 million tonnes in 2016. Most ethylene nowadays is produced via thermal cracking with steam of fossil feedstocks in cracking furnaces. T