Effects of carbon-to-zeolite ratio on a layered bed H-2 PSA using activated carbon and zeolite 5A were studied experimentally and theoretically. Coke oven gas (56.4 vol. % H-2, 26.6 vol. % CH4, 8.4 vol. % CO, 5.5 vol. % N-2, and 3.1 vol. % CO2) was used as a feed gas for the seven-step two-bed PSA process incorporating a backfill step. III these experiments, the effects of three operating variables such as adsorption pressure, feed rate and purge rate on the performance of a layered bed PSA were investigated. The layered bed gave better purity than the single-adsorbent bed at the same operating condition, except at low purge rate. Since every component had its own front velocity at each layer; a carbon-to-zeolite ratio affected product purity at a given recovery or throughput. Moreover, for a high-purity H-2 product from coke oven gas, an optimum carbon-to-zeolite ratio had to be determined to control a lending wavefront of N-2. In layered bed PSA processes, the temperature variations inside the bed reflected a kind of inflection or plateau at which a roll-up phenomenon occurred and showed the dynamics of adsorption well at each step during a cycle. Simulated results of the dynamic model incorporating mass, energy and momentum balances ngr ecd well with rite PSA experimental results.