(285d) Effect of Viscosity of Deep Eutectic Solvent on CO2 Capture Performance in an Energy Efficient Membrane Contactor Based Process | AIChE

(285d) Effect of Viscosity of Deep Eutectic Solvent on CO2 Capture Performance in an Energy Efficient Membrane Contactor Based Process

Authors 

Coin, Z., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Rother, G., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Bocharova, V., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Sacci, R., Oak Ridge Naitonal Laboratory
Arifuzzaman, M., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Ivanov, I. N., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Jakowski, J., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Bhave, R., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Dangwal, S., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Saito, T., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Sholl, D., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Huang, J., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Knight, T., Vanderbilt University
Greenhouse gas contributions to climate change have driven intense interest in separation of CO2 from wet flue gas streams. Absorption of CO2 in green solvents is one useful approach to address this challenge. Deep eutectic solvents (DES) are an emerging class of highly selective CO2 absorbents. A prototypical DES, reline, is a mixture of choline chloride and urea. Reline is a thermally stable, non-toxic, and biodegradable solvent with negligible volatility and inexpensive. We demonstrate a scalable, and energy-efficient hollow fiber membrane contactor (HFMC)-based process using a green solvent for CO2 capture. This process uses a deep eutectic solvent (DES) in a HFMC to provide close interfacial interactions and contact between the DES and CO2. This approach overcomes disadvantages associated with direct absorption in DES and could potentially be applied to a variety of solvent-based CO2 capture methods. Commercial low-cost polymer hollow fiber membranes (e. g., microporous polypropylene) were evaluated for CO2 capture with reline, a prototypical DES. Single gas measurements showed the DES-based polypropylene HFMC can capture and separate CO2 while rejecting N2. From a mixed gas containing N2 and CO2, the DES-based HFMC separated CO2 with a purity of 96.9 mol%. The effect of several process parameters including reline flow rate, pressure, temperature on the CO2 separation performance was studied. The effect of viscosity of reline on the CO2 capture performance was investigated by adding water to reline. By adding 30% water to reline, its viscosity reduced from 1600 centipoise to about 20 centipoise. The reduction in reline viscosity led to CO2 flux increased by a factor 5 in the membrane contactor system due to enhanced absorption and desorption kinetics. In-situ Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) measurements combined with density functional theory (DFT) based molecular dynamics simulations revealed that reline absorbs CO2 by physical absorption without forming a new chemical compound, and CO2 separation by reline occurs via pressure swing mechanism. This research provides fundamental insights about physical solvent-based separation processes and a pathway towards practical deployment.

Reference

  1. Syed Z. Islam, M. Arifuzzaman, G. Rother, V. Bocharova, R. Sacci, J. Jakowski, J. Huang, I. Ivanov, R. Bhave, D. S. Sholl, T. Saito, A Membrane Contactor Enabling Energy-efficient CO2 Capture from Point Sources with Deep Eutectic Solvents, Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research, 2023, 62 (10), 4455-4465.
  2. Syed Z. Islam, Ramesh R. Bhave, A novel membrane contactor based CO2 separation using a green solvent, US Provisional Patent Application No. 63/391,387, July 22, 2022.