Carbon Capture in Molten Salts (CCMS) is a method for capturing CO2 from a variety of flue gases related to power generation and energy intensive industry processes. The chemical principles are similar to those of the calcium looping process in solid state (using CaO-based solid sorbents), where CO2 is captured in a carbonation reaction to form CaCO3, and then released through the reverse calcination reaction in a second step. In the CCMS concept, the novelty is to operate the process in the liquid state in CaO-rich molten salts. The formed CaCO3 dissolves continuously in the melt, thus leaving highly reactive CaO readily available for the incoming CO2. In the present study, the technical and economic feasibility of the CCMS process has bee...
International audienceThe Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (MCFC) is a technology that provides clean elec...
AbstractSeveral systems for CO2 capture using CaO as regenerable sorbent are under development at In...
AbstractCement production process features intrinsically large CO2 emission due to the decomposition...
Carbon Capture in Molten Salts (CCMS) is a method for capturing CO2 from a variety of flue gases rel...
Carbon Capture in Molten Salts (CCMS) is a method for capturing CO2 from a variety of flue gases rel...
Stated in the Paris Agreement, utilization of Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) technologies are an e...
Carbon Capture in Molten Salts (CCMS) is an absorption-based method of separating CO2 from a flue ga...
CO2 capture by CaO in molten salts is a variant of calcium looping in which the active substances (C...
Calcium looping is a post-combustion technology that enables CO2 capture from the flue gases of indu...
CO2 capture opportunities for the Norwegian silicon industry have been assessed through a techno-eco...
GCCSI Webinar: Cutting Cost of CO2 Capture in Process Industry (CO2stCap) Project overview & fir...
The emergence of global warming phenomena that has adversely affected the world today has been large...
This study explores the use of state-of-the-art, high temperature Molten Carbonate Fuel Cells (MCFC)...
In this study a first assessment of the utilization of the Calcium Looping (CaL) as a CO2 capture me...
AbstractCarbon Capture and Utilization (CCU) is one of the most widely studied technology to reduce ...
International audienceThe Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (MCFC) is a technology that provides clean elec...
AbstractSeveral systems for CO2 capture using CaO as regenerable sorbent are under development at In...
AbstractCement production process features intrinsically large CO2 emission due to the decomposition...
Carbon Capture in Molten Salts (CCMS) is a method for capturing CO2 from a variety of flue gases rel...
Carbon Capture in Molten Salts (CCMS) is a method for capturing CO2 from a variety of flue gases rel...
Stated in the Paris Agreement, utilization of Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) technologies are an e...
Carbon Capture in Molten Salts (CCMS) is an absorption-based method of separating CO2 from a flue ga...
CO2 capture by CaO in molten salts is a variant of calcium looping in which the active substances (C...
Calcium looping is a post-combustion technology that enables CO2 capture from the flue gases of indu...
CO2 capture opportunities for the Norwegian silicon industry have been assessed through a techno-eco...
GCCSI Webinar: Cutting Cost of CO2 Capture in Process Industry (CO2stCap) Project overview & fir...
The emergence of global warming phenomena that has adversely affected the world today has been large...
This study explores the use of state-of-the-art, high temperature Molten Carbonate Fuel Cells (MCFC)...
In this study a first assessment of the utilization of the Calcium Looping (CaL) as a CO2 capture me...
AbstractCarbon Capture and Utilization (CCU) is one of the most widely studied technology to reduce ...
International audienceThe Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (MCFC) is a technology that provides clean elec...
AbstractSeveral systems for CO2 capture using CaO as regenerable sorbent are under development at In...
AbstractCement production process features intrinsically large CO2 emission due to the decomposition...