Issue 2, 2011

Clean liquid fuels from direct coal liquefaction: chemistry, catalysis, technological status and challenges

Abstract

Increased demand for liquid transportation fuels coupled with gradual depletion of oil reserves and volatile petroleum prices have recently renewed interest in coal-to-liquids (CTL) technologies. Large recoverable global coal reserves can provide liquid fuels and significantly reduce dependence on oil imports. Direct coal liquefaction (DCL) converts solid coal (H/C ratio ≈ 0.8) to liquid fuels (H/C ratio ≈ 2) by adding hydrogen at high temperature and pressures in the presence or absence of catalyst. This review provides a comprehensive literature survey of the coal structure, chemistry and catalysis involved in direct liquefaction of coal. This report also touches briefly on the historical development and current status of DCL technologies. Key issues, challenges involved in DCL process and directions for the future research are also addressed.

Graphical abstract: Clean liquid fuels from direct coal liquefaction: chemistry, catalysis, technological status and challenges

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
27 May 2010
Accepted
01 Sep 2010
First published
05 Nov 2010

Energy Environ. Sci., 2011,4, 311-345

Clean liquid fuels from direct coal liquefaction: chemistry, catalysis, technological status and challenges

S. Vasireddy, B. Morreale, A. Cugini, C. Song and J. J. Spivey, Energy Environ. Sci., 2011, 4, 311 DOI: 10.1039/C0EE00097C

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