Absorber design for CO2 capture with amine solvents is complicated by the presence of temperature gradients and multiple rate controlling mechanisms (chemical reaction and convective mass transfer). The development of rigorous rate-based models has created the opportunity to study the performance limiting mechanisms in detail. A structured approach was developed to validate absorber models, identify limiting phenomena, and develop configurations that specifically address limiting mechanisms. A rate-based model utilizing concentrated aqueous piperazine (PZ) was the focus of model validation and process development. The model was validated using pilot plant data, matching the number of transfer units (NTU) within + 1% while identifying a syst...
AbstractAbsorption/stripping with aqueous amines is a competitive technology for CO2 capture from co...
Amine scrubbing is the most promising solution to address CO₂ emission from power plants. Solvent de...
textThe Electrolyte Nonrandom Two-Liquid Activity Coefficient model in Aspen PlusTM 2006.5 was used ...
Absorber design for CO2 capture with amine solvents is complicated by the presence of temperature gr...
textRigorous thermodynamic and kinetic models were developed in Aspen Plus® Rate SepTM for 8 m PZ, 5...
textTo screen amine solvents for application in CO2 capture from coal-fired power plants, the equili...
A large-scale pilot plant (0.43 m ID) was extensively modified and converted into an absorber/stripp...
AbstractPrevious studies of CO2 absorption mainly focused on coal-fired flue gas with 12% CO2. Howev...
36 novel aqueous piperazine (PZ)-based amine blends for CO2 capture from flue gas were screened for ...
textThis work includes wetted wall column experiments that measure the CO₂ equilibrium partial press...
AbstractPilot plant data for CO2 capture with 8 m piperazine (PZ) were reconciled with an absorber m...
AbstractA systematic evaluation of the solvent capacity and mass transfer benefits of absorber inter...
textThis thesis seeks to improve the economic viability of carbon capture process by reducing the en...
Absorber design is associated with the most important trade-off between capital and operating cost f...
textThis work proposes an innovative blend of potassium carbonate (K2CO3) and piperazine (PZ) as a ...
AbstractAbsorption/stripping with aqueous amines is a competitive technology for CO2 capture from co...
Amine scrubbing is the most promising solution to address CO₂ emission from power plants. Solvent de...
textThe Electrolyte Nonrandom Two-Liquid Activity Coefficient model in Aspen PlusTM 2006.5 was used ...
Absorber design for CO2 capture with amine solvents is complicated by the presence of temperature gr...
textRigorous thermodynamic and kinetic models were developed in Aspen Plus® Rate SepTM for 8 m PZ, 5...
textTo screen amine solvents for application in CO2 capture from coal-fired power plants, the equili...
A large-scale pilot plant (0.43 m ID) was extensively modified and converted into an absorber/stripp...
AbstractPrevious studies of CO2 absorption mainly focused on coal-fired flue gas with 12% CO2. Howev...
36 novel aqueous piperazine (PZ)-based amine blends for CO2 capture from flue gas were screened for ...
textThis work includes wetted wall column experiments that measure the CO₂ equilibrium partial press...
AbstractPilot plant data for CO2 capture with 8 m piperazine (PZ) were reconciled with an absorber m...
AbstractA systematic evaluation of the solvent capacity and mass transfer benefits of absorber inter...
textThis thesis seeks to improve the economic viability of carbon capture process by reducing the en...
Absorber design is associated with the most important trade-off between capital and operating cost f...
textThis work proposes an innovative blend of potassium carbonate (K2CO3) and piperazine (PZ) as a ...
AbstractAbsorption/stripping with aqueous amines is a competitive technology for CO2 capture from co...
Amine scrubbing is the most promising solution to address CO₂ emission from power plants. Solvent de...
textThe Electrolyte Nonrandom Two-Liquid Activity Coefficient model in Aspen PlusTM 2006.5 was used ...