Environmental potential of carbon dioxide utilization in the polyurethane supply chain.

Faraday Discuss

Chair of Technical Thermodynamics, RWTH Aachen University, Schinkelstr. 8, 52062 Aachen, Germany.

Published: March 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The use of carbon dioxide (CO2) as a feedstock for polyurethanes (PUR) offers potential environmental benefits, including reduced CO2 and oil emissions when directly utilized in production.
  • Direct CO2 utilization can reduce emissions significantly but is limited to 0.30 kg CO2 per kg PUR, while indirect utilization (which requires hydrogen) can increase utilization to 1.7 kg CO2 per kg PUR.
  • Environmental benefits of indirect CO2 utilization are heavily influenced by the production methods of hydrogen, indicating that cleaner hydrogen production is essential for maximizing CO2 utilization and minimizing environmental impacts in PUR production.

Article Abstract

Potential environmental benefits have been identified for the utilization of carbon dioxide (CO2) as a feedstock for polyurethanes (PUR). CO2 can be utilized in the PUR supply chain in a wide variety of ways ranging from direct CO2 utilization for polyols as a PUR precursor, to indirect CO2 utilization for basic chemicals in the PUR supply chain. In this paper, we present a systematic exploration and environmental evaluation of all direct and indirect CO2 utilization options for flexible and rigid PUR foams. The analysis is based on an LCA-based PUR supply chain optimization model using linear programming to identify PUR production with minimal environmental impacts. The direct utilization of CO2 for polyols allows for large specific impact reductions of up to 4 kg CO2-eq. and 2 kg oil-eq. per kg CO2 utilized, but the amounts of CO2 that can be utilized are limited to 0.30 kg CO2 per kg PUR. The amount of CO2 utilized can be increased to up to 1.7 kg CO2 per kg PUR by indirect CO2 utilization in the PUR supply chain. Indirect CO2 utilization requires hydrogen (H2). The environmental impacts of H2 production strongly affect the impact of indirect CO2 utilization in PUR. To achieve optimal environmental performance under the current fossil-based H2 generation, PUR production can only utilize much less CO2 than theoretically possible. Thus, utilizing as much CO2 in the PUR supply chain as possible is not always environmentally optimal. Clean H2 production is required to exploit the full CO2 utilization potential for environmental impact reduction in PUR production.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c5fd00067jDOI Listing

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