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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Universiteit Gent |
| Country | Belgium |
| Start Date | Mar 01, 2025 |
| End Date | Feb 28, 2030 |
| Duration | 1,825 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 101142065 |
Power to heat (P2H) is expected to be the first type of electrification that will drastically transform the chemical industry.
This holds in particular for producing its major building blocks: the 300 Mt/yr light olefins via steam cracking at more than 800°C. e-CRACKER will implement P2H by so-called shockwave heating, enabling an increase in temperature to >1000°C in 10 ms, an order of magnitude faster than the current furnace-based technology in a revolutionary High-Mach reactor.
When combined with insight in the pressure-dependence of the cracking chemistry this will allow to avoid undesired side reactions and to increase olefin yields of ethane and plastic waste derived naphtha cracking by 10 wt.% compared to yield gains of 0.1 wt.%, at best, when applying alternative P2H such as resistive heating. e-CRACKER will: 1. generate new fundamental understanding of shock wave heating and kinetics under sub- and supersonic conditions; 2. demonstrate the practical applicability of an open-source, high fidelity Multiscale Modeling platform in combination with finite rate chemistry for turbulent reacting and rotating flows; 3. develop a compact, energy-efficient, electrified High-Mach reactor generating shockwaves and minimizing side products by avoiding back-mixing; 4. pave the way to avoid more than 200 Mt CO2/yr emissions with a scalable, flexible, step-by-step implementable technology driven by renewable electricity.
Starting from fundamental local and global (non-)reactive data collection (WP1), and a high-fidelity open source Multiscale Modeling framework (WP2) novel 3D reactors will be designed in silico using advanced optimization (WP3).
The power of the approach will be demonstrated in a 3D-printed High-Mach reactor, which, by operating under unconventional cracking conditions (lower pressures and faster heating) achieves yield increases of more than 10 wt% (WP4), contributing in a decisive way to the transition of the chemical industry.
Universiteit Gent
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