Post-combustion CO2 capture with a commercial activated carbon: Comparison of different regeneration strategies
A commercial activated carbon supplied by Norit, R2030CO2, was evaluated as CO2 adsorbent under conditions relevant to post-combustion CO2 capture (ambient pressure and diluted CO2). It has been demonstrated that this carbon possesses sufficient CO2/N2 selectivity in order to efficiently separate a binary mixture composed of 17% CO2 in N2. Moreover, this carbon was easily completely regenerated and it did not show capacity decay after 10 consecutive cycles. Three different regeneration strategies were compared in a single-bed adsorption unit: temperature swing adsorption (TSA), vacuum swing adsorption (VSA) and a combination of them, vacuum and temperature swing adsorption (VTSA). Through a simple two step TSA cycle, CO2 was concentrated from 17 to 43 vol%. For the single-bed cycle configurations, the productivity and CO2 recovery followed the sequence: TSA < VSA < VTSA. Values of productivity up to 1.9 mol kg−1 h−1 and a maximum CO2 recovery of 97% were reached.
Main Authors: | , , , , |
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Format: | artículo biblioteca |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Elsevier
2010-09
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Subjects: | CO2 capture, Adsorption cycles, Activated carbon, |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10261/102946 |
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