RED007 (Chemical):
I just got back from vacation and found this thread which takes me back to a time when I had to confront this some years back. I mixed H2 and various fuel gases for firing steam boilers - and also mutually fired the H2 with fuel oils. I can share my hands-on experience in case it helps. However, there are a lot of words, information, ideas, and opinions being batted back and forth on this issue and very little basic data is offered by you. butlen is making this point in his list of questions.
Basically, you've said you are generating power by "burning" various fuels - including diesel. Then you mention the use of "generator engine". You probably mean a diesel engine generator. But then, how do you intend to have us believe that you can switch fuels in a Diesel engine? You really should state your basic data very clearly; otherwise, you'll have an endless thread. In order to cut things to the quick allow me to state that you're going to find that it is economically not feasible to burn H2 to generate steam and power a turbine for electric energy. TD2K is stating this basic, practical fact. You cannot logically expect to purchase (or produce) H2 for fuel purposes within a boiler in order to back out CO2-producing fuels. Even if you had so-called "free", local produced H2 it would still not be economically possible. For one thing, not only the burners but also the combustion chamber and boiler tubes would have to be re-evaluated and possibly modified. Hydrogen does not produce CO2 - this is basic chemistry. What is more important for the combustion and heat recovery is that the lack of CO2 reduces the flames'luminosity and radiation qualities. The combustion chamber design is different and more challenging.
Additionally, you will find that the quantity of H2 required to replace (on a net, effective Btu per Btu basis) the fuel oil or natural gas will be priced out of a competitive range. It is just too damn expensive.
The idea of removing the CO2 from the flue gas as an answer is nonsense. Absorbing the CO2 and recovering it is no challenge. But what are you going to do with 90,000 tonnes of the stuff? I presume this is per day? You don't state the rate, but the issue is still DISPOSAL! You can't put it into the atmosphere (otherwise, you'd leave it in the flue!), so the only answer would be to sell it or use it as secondary or tertiary recovery for re-pressuring oil reservoirs. Great! Now you're in the CO2 business, competing with Praxair and Air Liquide. I don't think this is where you want to head with your scope unless your company has deep, deep pockets of cash.
The idea of Methanating the CO2 with H2 to produce Methane fuel is again not much of a process challenge. As you know, it is an exotherm; however, you have to carry it out at a relative high temperature and invest in process equipment. You will soon discover that the cost of the purchased H2 will outstrip the value of the produced CH4.
My comments are not meant to be negative nor contradictory; I've been there and back and it just doesn't work economically. The frank and naked truth is that some junk-science freaks in your government bodies have gotten it in their heads that they will dictate engineering to the engineers - whether we like it or not. The facts are that they are failing to comply with basic, logical truths and science. Fossil fuels are here because of a reason - not because we like to generate so-called "green house" gases. The answer is still fossil fuels (diesel, nat. gas, LPG, etc.) - that is, unless you accept nuclear energy (ugh!)
TD2K says it well when he states "Frankly, this sounds like a knee jerk reaction someone has had with little/no thought put into it." My experience, exactly.
The bottom line is: Forget about so-called Hydrogen power for now. The technology is not here yet to produce cost-effective H2. Better and more practical answers are:
1) approve nuclear power;
2) Hydroelectric;
3) geothermal; and
4) fire the stupid politicians who dreamed up the CO2 tax (this is the best solution).
Sorry I can't offer a miracle.
Art Montemayor
Spring, TX