Groundbreaking gas decarbonisation study to be led by University of Sheffield and Suiso

The University of Sheffield Energy Innovation Centre has partnered with local startup Suiso on a three-month pilot study to demonstrate its innovative gas decarbonisation technology.

The project will research and develop Suiso’s breakthrough pyrolysis technology which removes carbon from commonly-used fuels – natural gas, LPG, propane and biogas – before they are burned, with the potential to reduce or ultimately eliminate their CO2 emissions.

As this technology can be integrated with an existing natural gas supply, this groundbreaking study has the potential to enable factories, hospitals and other sectors that rely on natural gas to significantly cut their carbon emissions cost-effectively and without the need to replace their current systems.

In the three-month trial, Suiso will remove CO2 from natural gas blends in the form of a solid carbon powder, which has the potential to be used in water treatment, air purification and batteries. Researchers will then compare how the EIC’s pilot-scale furnace performs with this zero-carbon fuel compared to conventional gas.

The trial is particularly exciting for South Yorkshire’s many foundries, which rely heavily on gas furnaces and kilns that are difficult to decarbonise, and for SMEs, who produce around half of the UK’s CO2 emissions but struggle to find affordable ways to reduce their carbon footprint.

The Translational Energy Research Centre (TERC) is now a part of the Energy Innovation Centre at the University of Sheffield

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Mike Kane MP, Minister for Aviation, visited the University of Sheffield's Energy Innovation Centre to announce £63 million of funding for 17 projects to accelerate SAF production.