Abstract
About 1.9 gigatonnes of steel is produced every year emitting 7\% (2.7 gigatonnes) of global CO$_2$ in the process. More than 50\% of the CO$_2$ emissions come from a single step of steelmaking, known as ironmaking. Hydrogen based direct reduction (HyDR) of iron oxide to iron has emerged as an emissions free ironmaking alternative. However multi-scale phenomena ranging from nanometers to meters inside HyDR reactors exhibit detrimental microstructure evolution which resists gaseous transport of H$_2$/H$_2$O, slows reaction rates and disrupts continuous reactor operation. To resolve the conundrum between atomic and reactor scales, we devise a percolation-theory model to reconcile nanoscale porosity with macroscopic properties relevant to reactor design models. Using synchrotron nano X-ray computed-tomography, we quantify the evolution of pores in iron oxide pellets, and demonstrate how nano-scale pore networks influence micro and macro-scale flow properties such as permeability, diffusivity and tortuosity. Our new modeling framework bridges the gap between scales and offers the criteria to accelerate HyDR by at least 5x via feedstock-reactor synergies based on percolation.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Inforamtion for: A Percolation Path to Green Iron
Description
Supplementary Information contains text and equations used to calculate transport properties during the reduction chemistry of ironmaking.
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