Understanding the Flexibility Challenges of a Plant for Microbial CO2 Electroreduction with Hexanoic Acid Recovery

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Abstract

CO2 electroreduction driven by renewable energy is a promising technology for defossilizing the chemical industry, but intermittency challenges its operation. This work aims to understand the impacts of intermittency on the design, volume flexibility, and scheduling of a microbial electrosynthesis (MES) plant that converts CO2 to hexanoic acid. A battery and a storage tank were considered to buffer the intermittency. Explorative case studies showed that batteries were economically unfavorable. Restricted by the downstream processing (DSP) flexibility, a storage tank with optimized size combined with optimal scheduling, under the assumed conditions in this work, improved the plant’s volume flexibility only by 10%. The carbon footprint became 3 times lower when switching from grid to renewable electricity, but the levelized production cost of hexanoic acid increased. Hence, coupling with renewable electricity was not economically but environmentally favorable. Developing more flexible DSP technologies or synthesizing higher-purity chemicals are needed to enhance MES’s attractiveness.