(703c) Direct Air Capture (DAC) of CO2 Using a Tailored Chelating Exchanger at Ambient Temperature | AIChE

(703c) Direct Air Capture (DAC) of CO2 Using a Tailored Chelating Exchanger at Ambient Temperature

Authors 

SenGupta, A. - Presenter, Lehigh University
Climate change is considered to be the worst existential threat confronting humanity today and, as always is the case, the suffering of marginalized populations is disproportionately high. An appropriate CO2 capture technology that engages the public at the grassroots level can be a transformative driver and an equalizer. We, at Lehigh University, have developed a process to capture CO2 directly from the atmosphere at any location and store as pure CO2. The proposed technology: (i) is amenable to deployment in local communities including schools, churches, NGOs, and wastewater plants; and (ii) operates at ambient temperature without requiring steam or waste heat. Besides solar driven electricity for electrolysis, no other form of energy is required.

The fundamental scientific tenet of the proposed Direct Air Capture (DAC) of CO2 stems from the unique weak acid-weak base (WAWB) properties of CO2 and its interaction with a new class of tailored chelating ion exchangers. When a transition metal cation, namely Cu(II), is covalently attached to a chelating polymer with nitrogen donor atoms (polyamine) through Lewis Acid-Base (LAB) interaction, its two positive charges are not neutralized. The resulting material, referred to as PolyLAB-Cu2+, is essentially an anion exchanger with a very high affinity for carbonate or CO32- through both electrostatic and concurrent Lewis acid-base (LAB) interaction. Sorption and desorption processes occur as follows:

CO2 Sorption and Desorption: Use of OH- as the counter-ion for PolyLAB-Cu2+ leads to irreversible uptake of CO2 from the atmosphere in the following sequence: i) dissolution of CO2 in the moisture/humidity at the sorbent interface; ii) transport of non-ionized H2CO3 inside the ion exchanger; and iii) rapid neutralization followed by selective binding of CO32 onto Cu(II). Note that it is a three phase (air-water-exchanger) process where the presence of humidity or moisture in between air and the exchanger facilitates dissolution of CO2 followed by selective uptake.

Upon exhaustion, passage of 3% Na2SO4 at near-neutral pH causes desorption of CO32- leading to an exit stream with high alkalinity which again is passed through a weak-acid cation (WAC) exchanger to recover pure CO2. PolyLAB-Cu2+ is subsequently converted into hydroxyl or OH- form through passage NaOH. Also, the WAC is regenerated with dilute 2-3% H2SO4.

Both NaOH and H2SO4 are generated through electrolysis of Na2SO4 which again is reproduced in the process, thus avoiding external addition of chemicals. Thus, it is essentially a cyclic two-step self-sustaining process where CO2 is first captured in the first step from the ultra-dilute ambient air and then recovered in the second step as pure CO2. The entire sorption-desorption cycle operates at ambient temperature and besides electricity for the electrolysis cell, no other chemicals or energy is needed.

Experimental Results: We evaluated various polymers with nitrogen groups that are commercially available and then identified one chelating polymer that is durable, chemically stable and possesses high affinity toward Cu(II). During the last two years, we have carried out an extensive number of laboratory experiments and three key significant findings which make the process quite distinctive are presented below:

  1. Under ambient conditions, PolyLAB-Cu2+ offered a sorption capacity of 5.1 M CO2/g dry resin and that is 2.5-3.0 times greater than the capacity of other materials currently in use. Also, these flow-through high capacities are obtained for an empty bed contact time (EBCT) of only 1.0 second.
  2. One major downside of direct air capture is the ultra-low concentration of CO2 in the ambient air (approximately 0.04% or 400 ppm by volume). Understandably, for increased uptake, point-source flue gas streams with higher CO2 concentrations have been desirable targets. Although counter-intuitive, PolyLAB-Cu2+ offers identical CO2 capture capacity at ambient conditions, with 10% CO2 and 50% CO2, the rest being nitrogen. The scientific explanation is being avoided here for the sake of brevity but the observation is very significant from an application viewpoint.
  • For flow-through systems, five consecutive runs were carried out with regenerations in between. Capacities did not change or deteriorate. Dilute NaOH and H2SO4 produced from the electrolysis cell were used for regeneration and Na2SO4 is reproduced at the end of the process and reused.

Path Forward: The proposed process operates at ambient temperature and does not need any thermal energy or waste heat. Consequently, the process is more amenable to implementation around the world including developing countries and marginalized communities with appropriate carbon credit. The work is under progress to put the electrolysis cell in tandem with solar electric panels to make the process a true Negative Emission Technology (NET). Also, the scale-up of the process is relatively straightforward and a skid-mounted prototype is currently under constructio