Parametric study on the regeneration heat requirement of an amine-based solid adsorbent process for post-combustion carbon capture

The thermal energy required for regeneration of CO2-rich adsorbents or absorbents is usually regarded as the most important criterion to evaluate different materials and processes for application in commercialscale CO2 capture systems. It is expected that the regeneration heat can be greatly reduced...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhang, Wenbin, Liu, Hao, Sun, Yuan, Cakstins, Janis, Sun, Chenggong, Snape, Colin E.
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40075/
_version_ 1848795979264819200
author Zhang, Wenbin
Liu, Hao
Sun, Yuan
Cakstins, Janis
Sun, Chenggong
Snape, Colin E.
author_facet Zhang, Wenbin
Liu, Hao
Sun, Yuan
Cakstins, Janis
Sun, Chenggong
Snape, Colin E.
author_sort Zhang, Wenbin
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The thermal energy required for regeneration of CO2-rich adsorbents or absorbents is usually regarded as the most important criterion to evaluate different materials and processes for application in commercialscale CO2 capture systems. It is expected that the regeneration heat can be greatly reduced by replacing the mature aqueous monoethanolamine (MEA) technology with amine-based solid adsorbents capturing systems, due to the much lower heat capacity of solid adsorbents comparing to aqueous MEA and the avoidance of evaporating a large amount of water in the regenerator. Comparing to the MEA technology, the regeneration heat for solid adsorbent based systems has not received adequate attention especially on the impacts of process related parameters. Further, the methodologies used in previous investigations to calculate the regeneration heat may have deficiencies in defining the working capacities, adopting proper heat recovery strategies and/or evaluating the effect of moisture co-adsorption. In this study, an energy equation to calculate the regeneration heat has been revised and proposed to systematically evaluate the most important parameters affecting the regeneration heat, including the physical properties of the adsorbents and process related variables including the heat of adsorption, specific heat capacity, working capacity, moisture adsorption of the polyethyleneimine (PEI)/silica adsorbent, the swing temperature difference and the degree of heat recovery. Based on the parametric analysis, the calculated regeneration heat for the PEI/silica adsorbent based system is found to be around 2.46 GJ/tCO2, which is much lower than the value of 3.9 GJ/tCO2 for a typical aqueous MEA system and is also lower than 3.3 GJ/tCO2 for an advanced MEA system. Sensitivity analysis of all the parameters has also been conducted and the results have shown that working capacity, moisture adsorption and heat recovery ratios are the most influential factors. With more proficiency and development in the energy efficient process designs, the advantages of a solid adsorbent based capturing system over typical MEA systems will be justified.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T19:40:41Z
format Article
id nottingham-40075
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:40:41Z
publishDate 2016
publisher Elsevier
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-400752020-05-04T17:46:37Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40075/ Parametric study on the regeneration heat requirement of an amine-based solid adsorbent process for post-combustion carbon capture Zhang, Wenbin Liu, Hao Sun, Yuan Cakstins, Janis Sun, Chenggong Snape, Colin E. The thermal energy required for regeneration of CO2-rich adsorbents or absorbents is usually regarded as the most important criterion to evaluate different materials and processes for application in commercialscale CO2 capture systems. It is expected that the regeneration heat can be greatly reduced by replacing the mature aqueous monoethanolamine (MEA) technology with amine-based solid adsorbents capturing systems, due to the much lower heat capacity of solid adsorbents comparing to aqueous MEA and the avoidance of evaporating a large amount of water in the regenerator. Comparing to the MEA technology, the regeneration heat for solid adsorbent based systems has not received adequate attention especially on the impacts of process related parameters. Further, the methodologies used in previous investigations to calculate the regeneration heat may have deficiencies in defining the working capacities, adopting proper heat recovery strategies and/or evaluating the effect of moisture co-adsorption. In this study, an energy equation to calculate the regeneration heat has been revised and proposed to systematically evaluate the most important parameters affecting the regeneration heat, including the physical properties of the adsorbents and process related variables including the heat of adsorption, specific heat capacity, working capacity, moisture adsorption of the polyethyleneimine (PEI)/silica adsorbent, the swing temperature difference and the degree of heat recovery. Based on the parametric analysis, the calculated regeneration heat for the PEI/silica adsorbent based system is found to be around 2.46 GJ/tCO2, which is much lower than the value of 3.9 GJ/tCO2 for a typical aqueous MEA system and is also lower than 3.3 GJ/tCO2 for an advanced MEA system. Sensitivity analysis of all the parameters has also been conducted and the results have shown that working capacity, moisture adsorption and heat recovery ratios are the most influential factors. With more proficiency and development in the energy efficient process designs, the advantages of a solid adsorbent based capturing system over typical MEA systems will be justified. Elsevier 2016-04-15 Article PeerReviewed Zhang, Wenbin, Liu, Hao, Sun, Yuan, Cakstins, Janis, Sun, Chenggong and Snape, Colin E. (2016) Parametric study on the regeneration heat requirement of an amine-based solid adsorbent process for post-combustion carbon capture. Applied Energy, 168 . pp. 394-405. ISSN 0306-2619 Amine-based solid adsorbent ; PEI-silica adsorbent ; Regeneration heat ; Parametric study ; Post-combustion capture http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0306261916300290 doi:10.1016/j.apenergy.2016.01.049 doi:10.1016/j.apenergy.2016.01.049
spellingShingle Amine-based solid adsorbent ; PEI-silica adsorbent ; Regeneration heat ; Parametric study ; Post-combustion capture
Zhang, Wenbin
Liu, Hao
Sun, Yuan
Cakstins, Janis
Sun, Chenggong
Snape, Colin E.
Parametric study on the regeneration heat requirement of an amine-based solid adsorbent process for post-combustion carbon capture
title Parametric study on the regeneration heat requirement of an amine-based solid adsorbent process for post-combustion carbon capture
title_full Parametric study on the regeneration heat requirement of an amine-based solid adsorbent process for post-combustion carbon capture
title_fullStr Parametric study on the regeneration heat requirement of an amine-based solid adsorbent process for post-combustion carbon capture
title_full_unstemmed Parametric study on the regeneration heat requirement of an amine-based solid adsorbent process for post-combustion carbon capture
title_short Parametric study on the regeneration heat requirement of an amine-based solid adsorbent process for post-combustion carbon capture
title_sort parametric study on the regeneration heat requirement of an amine-based solid adsorbent process for post-combustion carbon capture
topic Amine-based solid adsorbent ; PEI-silica adsorbent ; Regeneration heat ; Parametric study ; Post-combustion capture
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40075/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40075/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40075/