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Development of carbon-based vacuum, temperature and concentration swing adsorption post-combustion CO2 capture processes

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Abstract Vacuum, temperature and concentration swing adsorption processes, have been designed to capture 85% of the CO2 emitted by an advanced supercritical coal fired power plant of 800 MW taken as… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Vacuum, temperature and concentration swing adsorption processes, have been designed to capture 85% of the CO2 emitted by an advanced supercritical coal fired power plant of 800 MW taken as reference, and to produce a concentrated product with 95% of CO2 (dry basis) using a sustainable carbon adsorbent inside the tubes of a tube-bundle adsorber. Indirect heat transfer is used to increase productivity and to conserve energy within the process. Two different configurations of the cyclic process have been evaluated at cyclic steady state through dynamic process simulation, using a detailed non-isothermal non-equilibrium fixed bed adsorption model that takes into consideration competitive adsorption between the main flue gas components: N2, CO2 and H2O. Simulation results indicate that the purity and recovery constraints can be met with a specific heat duty of 2.32 MJth kg−1 CO2 and a specific electric consumption of 0.66 MJe kg−1 CO2. The main advantage of this process is that the specific heat duty, which is lower than the benchmark amine absorption technology, could be satisfied using waste heat.

Keywords: co2; concentration swing; adsorption; vacuum temperature; swing adsorption; temperature concentration

Journal Title: Chemical Engineering Journal
Year Published: 2019

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