Steam Reforming Yield Calculator

Estimate hydrogen yield from steam reforming conditions. Compare conversion, selectivity, efficiency, and output in seconds. Built for engineers reviewing reformer performance across operating cases.

Input Data

Leave blank to let the calculator estimate actual hydrogen from operating conditions.
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Example Data Table

Case CH4 Feed S/C Ratio Conversion CO Share CO2 Share Temp Pressure
Base1003.085%40%60%850 °C20 bar
High Steam1203.488%35%65%870 °C18 bar
Lower Activity952.880%48%52%820 °C22 bar

Formula Used

The calculator uses methane steam reforming and water gas shift stoichiometry. One mole of methane can produce three moles of hydrogen if carbon leaves as carbon monoxide, or four moles if carbon leaves as carbon dioxide.

Theoretical H2 = Converted CH4 × (3 × CO fraction + 4 × CO2 fraction)

Converted CH4 = CH4 feed × conversion fraction

Estimated Actual H2 = Theoretical H2 × performance factor

Hydrogen Yield (%) = Actual H2 ÷ Theoretical H2 × 100

The performance factor combines steam adequacy, temperature, pressure, catalyst activity, and system losses to create a practical operating estimate for engineering screening.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter methane feed rate in kmol/h.
  2. Provide the steam-to-carbon ratio used in the reformer.
  3. Enter expected methane conversion and carbon split between CO and CO2.
  4. Add temperature, pressure, catalyst activity, and system loss values.
  5. Optionally enter measured hydrogen output if plant data is available.
  6. Press Submit to show the result above the form and beneath the header.
  7. Use the CSV and PDF buttons to save the calculated summary.

Process Performance Notes

Hydrogen Yield and Carbon Conversion

Steam reforming converts methane and steam into synthesis gas that contains hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide. In a simple screening model, higher methane conversion increases hydrogen production directly because more feed reaches the reforming and shift pathways. This calculator links conversion, carbon distribution, and operating modifiers to estimate theoretical and practical hydrogen yield for preliminary engineering review. It also summarizes hydrogen per feed and carbon efficiency, giving engineers fast comparison metrics during early case development and routine performance review meetings each week internally.

Operating Temperature Effects

Primary reforming is strongly endothermic, so temperature remains one of the most influential variables. Industrial tubular reformers often operate around 780 to 900 °C, where methane conversion improves and hydrogen output rises. The calculator reflects this trend with a temperature factor that rewards hotter operation within practical bounds while avoiding unrealistic gains outside screening conditions.

Steam Ratio and Coke Control

Steam-to-carbon ratio affects equilibrium, catalyst protection, and downstream reliability. Ratios near 2.5 to 3.5 are common in many plants because they reduce carbon deposition risk and support better methane conversion. Excess steam, however, adds energy demand to the fired heater and steam system. The calculator therefore treats steam ratio as a yield driver, not an unlimited benefit.

Pressure and Catalyst Activity

Higher pressure can penalize equilibrium conversion in the reformer even when it benefits later process sections. Catalyst condition also changes plant performance over time through deactivation, poisoning, or fouling. The activity factor in this calculator helps engineers compare fresh and aged catalyst behavior quickly. A moderate pressure penalty and activity adjustment together create a more realistic plant-level estimate.

Interpreting Theoretical and Actual Output

Theoretical hydrogen is determined from stoichiometry after splitting converted carbon between carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide. Actual hydrogen is lower when losses, temperature shortfalls, pressure effects, or catalyst limitations reduce real performance. Comparing both values helps identify operating margin. A large gap often points to furnace duty limits, heat transfer issues, maldistribution, or conservative feed and steam settings.

Use in Engineering Screening

This tool is best suited to front-end studies, quick case comparisons, troubleshooting discussions, and educational estimation. It does not replace rigorous equilibrium software, full heat balance models, or reactor design packages. Even so, the calculated yield, hydrogen per methane feed, and carbon conversion metrics provide a structured basis for ranking reformer cases before deeper simulation and economic evaluation.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does hydrogen yield mean here?

It is the ratio of actual hydrogen output to theoretical hydrogen from the converted methane and selected carbon split. It shows how closely operation approaches stoichiometric potential.

2. Why does higher temperature improve yield?

Steam reforming is endothermic. Higher reformer temperature generally supports stronger methane conversion and better hydrogen generation, provided tube limits, catalyst stability, and furnace capacity remain acceptable.

3. Why is the steam-to-carbon ratio important?

It influences equilibrium performance and coke resistance. Too little steam can reduce conversion and raise carbon risk, while too much steam increases utility demand and thermal duty.

4. Can I use measured hydrogen instead of estimated output?

Yes. Enter measured actual hydrogen to compare plant data against the theoretical result. This is useful for benchmarking operating performance and spotting hidden process losses.

5. Does the calculator replace process simulation?

No. It is a screening and educational tool. Detailed design still requires rigorous reaction equilibrium, heat transfer, pressure drop, furnace, and catalyst modeling.

6. What units are used in the results?

Feed and product flowrates are shown in kmol/h, temperature in degrees Celsius, pressure in bar, and performance indicators as dimensionless values or percentages.

Yield Visualization

The chart compares theoretical and actual hydrogen output for the current case.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.