The global transition toward a low-carbon economy has intensified the interest in green hydrogen as a key enabler of industrial decarbonization. In particular, the steel sector, one of the most carbon-intensive industries, offers significant opportunities for emissions reduction through H2-based technologies. This study presents a techno-economic assessment of alternative green hydrogen supply pathways, namely alkaline electrolysis and ammonia cracking, and evaluates their integration into hydrogen-based direct reduction (HyDR) routes. Process simulations are performed using Aspen Plus® V14 to quantify the energy consumption, hydrogen demand, and associated CO2 emissions across multiple configurations and case studies. A comprehensive 3E (energy, economics, and environmental) evaluation framework is applied to compare system performance and assess the suitability of each pathway for large-scale deployment. The results indicate that ammonia cracking represents a technically viable and potentially competitive hydrogen supply option for steel decarbonization under the assumed operating conditions, highlighting its relevance as a transitional pathway toward low-carbon steel production.

Green Hydrogen Production for Decarbonizing the Steel Industry: Energy and Economic Assessment of Electrolysis and Ammonia Cracking Systems / Spatolisano, Elvira; Trinca, Antonio; Flagiello, Domenico; Vilardi, Giorgio. - In: ENERGIES. - ISSN 1996-1073. - 19:3(2026). [10.3390/en19030717]

Green Hydrogen Production for Decarbonizing the Steel Industry: Energy and Economic Assessment of Electrolysis and Ammonia Cracking Systems

Flagiello, Domenico;
2026

Abstract

The global transition toward a low-carbon economy has intensified the interest in green hydrogen as a key enabler of industrial decarbonization. In particular, the steel sector, one of the most carbon-intensive industries, offers significant opportunities for emissions reduction through H2-based technologies. This study presents a techno-economic assessment of alternative green hydrogen supply pathways, namely alkaline electrolysis and ammonia cracking, and evaluates their integration into hydrogen-based direct reduction (HyDR) routes. Process simulations are performed using Aspen Plus® V14 to quantify the energy consumption, hydrogen demand, and associated CO2 emissions across multiple configurations and case studies. A comprehensive 3E (energy, economics, and environmental) evaluation framework is applied to compare system performance and assess the suitability of each pathway for large-scale deployment. The results indicate that ammonia cracking represents a technically viable and potentially competitive hydrogen supply option for steel decarbonization under the assumed operating conditions, highlighting its relevance as a transitional pathway toward low-carbon steel production.
2026
Green Hydrogen Production for Decarbonizing the Steel Industry: Energy and Economic Assessment of Electrolysis and Ammonia Cracking Systems / Spatolisano, Elvira; Trinca, Antonio; Flagiello, Domenico; Vilardi, Giorgio. - In: ENERGIES. - ISSN 1996-1073. - 19:3(2026). [10.3390/en19030717]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/1032741
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