Why is the production of hydrogen from biogas a safety-critical process?
The production of green hydrogen is one of the key pillars of the energy transition to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and build a more sustainable future. In this context, biogas stands out as a unique raw material - renewable, CO₂-neutral and even enabling a negative carbon balance.
Our client, the German company e-flox GmbH, specialises in the design and manufacture of advanced energy systems and FLOX® technologies that efficiently use biogas to produce hydrogen. Their systems and burners are used for the low-emission combustion of residual gases from biogas treatment, process gases, landfill gas and many others. One of the unique features of the e-flox technology is the efficient dissipation of heat. A containerised system built by the customer is currently producing 100 kg of hydrogen per day. The unique steam reforming method it uses achieves 60% efficiency, while traditional electrolysis is only 20%. However, this impressive achievement comes with unique safety requirements.
Temperature measurement in biogas systems is a key element that directly affects the safety and stability of the processes. Why is it so important? Biogas plants often operate in explosive atmospheres (ATEX), where even the slightest deviation from the standard can lead to serious consequences. Stable temperature maintenance in the steam reforming process, a key stage in hydrogen production, is therefore an absolute priority.