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CO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May 26 27 th 2011

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Page 1: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

CO2 Capture by Adsorption:

General Principles

Douglas Ruthven,

University of Maine,

Orono, ME 04469

Stanford University, May 26 – 27th 2011

Page 2: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Global Warming ??

Orono ME April 1st 2011 (14 inches Snow!)

Page 3: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Outline

1. The challenge - Direct air capture vs point source.

2. Very large scale!

3. Present Technology - Amine Absorption.

4. Other Options – Economic Considerations.

5. Adsorption Systems:

Contactors/pressure drop

Process Schemes

Regeneration of Adsorbent

Adsorbent Choice/New Adsorbents

6. Conclusions

Page 4: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Options for CO2 Capture

Direct Air Capture (DAC) - pCO2 ≈ 3.7 x 10-4 atm.

Advantages: Clean feed, free choice of location

(e.g. to optimize use of solar power).

Disadvantage: Very low feed concentration!

Cproduct/Cfeed ≈ 2800

Point Source Capture (Power Station or Cement Works) pCO2 ≈ 0.13atm.

Advantage: Much higher feed conc.

Disadvantages: Dirty feed, location fixed by site of power plant.

Advantage of higher feed concentration overwhelms other considerations!

See Report of American Physical Society Chemical Capture of CO2 from Ambient Air (2010).

Page 5: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Thermodynamic Considerations

Minimum theoretical Work of Separation = -ΔGmixing

Based on product Wmin increases asymptotically as xf→0.

Energy required for separation from a dilute feed is large.

Page 6: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Selling price as Function of Concentration in

raw feed (log-log plot)

Separation costs are dominant so costs scale with feed concentration

regardless of nature of product. (T.K.Sherwood)

Page 7: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

The Challenge: Huge Scale of operation, very

large flow rates

1000 Megawatt Coal Fired Power Station.

Stack Gas Flow Rate = 2.3 x 105 kg.moles /hr.

= 6 x106 m3 /hr.

≈ 1.0 cubic km per week!

CO2 Flow Rate = 3 x 104 kg.moles /hr.

= 1300 Tonne/Hr

≈ One Tractor trailer Load in

Four Mins!

Page 8: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May
Page 9: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Present Technology - Absorption

Absorption in MEA – Well optimised process (50 yrs)

434 Megawatt → 303 Megawatt net (with CO2 capture!)

COST: $ 60/Tonne CO2 or about 10c/kw hr. More than doubles electricity

cost! [DOE/NETL Report 401/110907 (2007)].

Page 10: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Can we do Better?

Possibilities:

Perm – Selective membrane

Adsorption:

Choice of Contactor

Regeneration Method (PSA/TSA)

Process Scheme/ Cycle Time

Choice of Adsorbent

High throughput requires rapid cycle to keep

adsorber volume within reasonable limits!

Page 11: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Scaling of Costs with Throughput

Membrane Adsorption or Absorption

COST COST

THROUGHPUT THROUGHPUT

At large scales of operation membrane processes are

unlikely to be economic!

Page 12: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Parallel Passage Contactor

Narrow Spacing – How narrow? Advantages:

Uniformity necessary to avoid dispersion Low ΔP

Metal backing to eliminate ΔT Good Mass Transfer

Rapid Response

Isothermal

Page 13: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May
Page 14: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Practical Monoliths

Optical micrographs of uncoated and washcoated cordierite honeycomb substrates. (a) uncoated honeycomb, (b) 18.2% washcoat (80% silicalite +20% silica binder), and (c) 30% washcoat (60% silicalite + 40% silica binder).

Page 15: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Schematic of Circulating Adsorbent –

Continuous Counter-Current System

Page 16: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Circulating Adsorbent Test System (TDA)

Page 17: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Pressure Swing vs. T Swing

Page 18: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Pressure Swing vs. T Swing

PSA: Requires approx. linear isotherm.

Delta loading is limited.

Rapid cycle is easily achieved (especially with parallel passage contactor).

Cycle times < 1 sec. are possible.

TSA: K = Ko exp(-ΔH/RT)

Small change in T gives large change in K – hence large delta loading.

BUT: Rapid cycle requires very fast heat transfer – difficult to achieve.

Minimum cycle time is minutes (not sec.)

Page 19: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

QuestAir RPSA System

Page 20: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Rapid Cycle PSA (RPSA)

Current Status:

RPSA process (air separation) Questair Inc.

Small/Medium scale operation.

Cycle time ~1sec.

What are the limits on size/cycle time??

Possibility of a small system with very high

throughput.

Required scale-up for CO2 capture very

difficult!

Page 21: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Rapid Cycle TSA

PSA (and RPSA) only for weakly adsorbed species.

RTSA would allow use of stronger (higher capacity)

adsorbents! - but fast heat exchange is difficult.

One Possible Approach: Hollow fibre adsorbent

(Lively et al. I and E.C.Res. 2009)

Page 22: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Rapid Cycle TSA (Lively et al. I and E.C.Res. 2009)

.Very low ΔP on gas side.

Heat exchange fluid through central tube.

Rapid response but minutes not seconds.

Possible application for CO2 from stack

gas.

Page 23: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May
Page 24: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Adsorbents for CO2 CaptureZeolite 5A (Early Mitsubishi Trials 1990s)

400K: KCO2 ≈ 2.5 mmole/g.

(-ΔH) ≈ 42 kj/mole

Capacity at 400K, 0.13 atm ≈ 0.33mmole/g.

High affinity for H2O limits use with humid stack gas.

Adsorbent is unstable to acid conditions (SOx).

TDA Adsorbent (2009) “Alkalized Alumina”

More robust adsorbent! Live steam regeneration.

Similar capacity (0.3 mmole/g. at 400K, 0.13atm.)

Smaller (-ΔH) ≈ 23 kJ/mole – requires larger T swing for regeneration.

Amine Functionalized Silica - Potentially attractive but further testing needed!

Page 25: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May
Page 26: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Working Capacity (delta loading) of Adsorbent-

The Achilles Heel of Adsorption processes.

Working capacity ≈ 1.3%wt ≈ 0.3 mole/kg adsorbent.

1000 Megawatt power Stn. → 500kg mole CO2 /min.

Adsorbent circulation rate ≈ 1800 tonnes/min.

Assume one minute cycle time (adsorption + regen. time).

Rotary Wheel Contactor diameter 10m, depth 1.0m.

24 Wheels in parallel to provide required

adsorbent circulation rate!!

If one wheel, diameter = 48m - impractical !

Viable process will require a much higher working capacity

and/or shorter cycle time.

Page 27: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Improved Adsorbents?

Amine functionalized mesoporous silicaSayari and Belmabkhout, Adsorption 15, 318 (2009); Ind.Eng.

Chem.Res. 49. 359 (2010); Chem. Eng.J. 158, 513 (2010)

Highly selective for CO2. Capacity ≈ ten times 5A or Functionalized Alumina. High K requires thermal swing regeneration.

Page 28: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Amine functionalized mesoporous silicaEffect of water vapor is minimal! Promising but further

testing under more realistic conditions is needed!

Page 29: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

MOFS: Millward and Yaghi JACS (2005)

MOFS: High saturation capacity but relatively low K so

working capacity at low partial pressures appears

modest – comparable with AC.

Page 30: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Conclusions

Parallel Passage Contactor and rapid cycle process to achieve high throughput.

Thermal swing or pressure swing? Both are possible.

P swing is faster but difficult to achieve high working capacity.

Successful demonstration at pilot scale –

Approx. $ 40/Tonne CO2 (c.f. $60/Tonne for current Amine Absorption) – still ≈ 5c/kwh !!

BUT: Scale-Up for 1000 Megawatt Power Stn. Problematic.

Improved adsorbent with working capacity ~10%wt CO2 is needed for economic viability – supported amines?

Wheel system (Inventys) with such an adsorbent: $20/Tonne CO2 (~3 cent/kwh) – estimated.

Page 31: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May
Page 32: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Thermal Swing – 5min cycle time

Page 33: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Membrane separation

Feed

(A+B)

Retentate (B+trace A)

High P

Permeate (A+ trace B)Low P

High P

Gas or Liquid

Page 34: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Membrane Element

If ph>>pl Sep.Factor(α)→KADA/KBDB=πA/πB=s

Page 35: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Zeolite Monoliths (Crittenden)

Requirements: Channel diameter ~ wall thickness < 0.5 mm. For good mass transfer.

Uniform channels to minimize axial dispersion.

Page 36: CO2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles · PDF fileCO 2 Capture by Adsorption: General Principles Douglas Ruthven, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 Stanford University, May

Counter-Current and Simulated

Counter-Current Processes