Integrated absorption–mineralisation for energy-efficient CO2 sequestration: Reaction mechanism and feasibility of using fly ash as a feedstock
journal contribution
posted on 2018-11-15, 00:00 authored by L Ji, H Yu, B Yu, K Jiang, M Grigore, X Wang, Shuaifei ZhaoShuaifei Zhao, K Li© 2018 Elsevier B.V. The most critical challenge for the large-scale implementation of amine-based carbon dioxide (CO2) capture is the high energy consumption of absorbent thermal regeneration. To reduce the energy requirement, absorbent thermal regeneration can be replaced by a chemical method that integrates amine scrubbing, chemical regeneration and CO2 mineralisation in one process. However, the mechanisms of the process and the application of industrial waste as feedstocks have not been fully investigated. In the present work, we studied the integrated CO2 absorption–mineralisation process using the benchmark solvent monoethanolamine (MEA) as an amine absorbent and fly ash as a chemical regeneration agent. We investigated the mechanism involved in the mineralisation in detail and studied the performance of MEA in regeneration by mineralisation of calcium oxide (CaO) at various CO2-loadings. The performance stability of MEA was verified in multicycle CO2 absorption–mineralisation experiments. We also investigated the technical feasibility of using fly ash as a feedstock for absorbent regeneration. Our results show that MEA can be regenerated after a carbonation reaction with both calcium oxide and fly ash at 40 °C, and that the CO2 absorbed by MEA is precipitated as calcium carbonate. Compared with traditional thermal regeneration-based CO2 capture, the integrated CO2 absorption–mineralisation process displays a similar cyclic CO2-loading (0.21 mol/mol) but has great advantages in energy reduction and capital cost savings due to the smaller energy requirement of amine regeneration and the limitation of CO2 compression and pipeline transport. This technology has great potential for industrial application, particularly with CaO-containing wastes such as fly ash and carbide slag.
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Alternative title
Integrated absorption–mineralisation for energy-efficient CO₂ sequestration: Reaction mechanism and feasibility of using fly ash as a feedstockJournal
Chemical Engineering JournalVolume
352Pagination
151-162Location
Amsterdam, The NetherlandsPublisher DOI
ISSN
1385-8947eISSN
1873-3212Language
EnglishPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalPublisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE SAUsage metrics
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Keywords
Science & TechnologyTechnologyEngineering, EnvironmentalEngineering, ChemicalEngineeringCO2 captureChemical regenerationMEAMulticycleFly ashPOSTCOMBUSTION CARBON CAPTUREMOLECULAR STRUCTURAL VARIATIONSTECHNOECONOMIC ASSESSMENTMORPHOLOGICAL-CHANGESMEMBRANE EVAPORATIONDIOXIDE CAPTUREAMINE SOLUTIONKINETICSCO2(AQ)STORAGE090401 Carbon Capture Engineering (excl Sequestration)4004 Chemical engineering4005 Civil engineering4011 Environmental engineering
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