Insights into High Temperature Sorbents for Carbon Dioxide

This article reports on an experimental research dealing with the use of solid sorbents for CO2 uptake from gaseous stream at high temperature. Hydroxyl-apatite and strontium carbonate have been adopted as starting materials for preparing a regenerable sorbent, upon calcination. Both sorbents have b...

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Main Authors: F. Miccio, F. Doghieri, E. Landi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2015-05-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/4918
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spelling doaj-a75851c3e81448e2a0d7086f8c3f7f032021-02-20T21:13:33ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162015-05-014310.3303/CET1543151Insights into High Temperature Sorbents for Carbon DioxideF. MiccioF. DoghieriE. LandiThis article reports on an experimental research dealing with the use of solid sorbents for CO2 uptake from gaseous stream at high temperature. Hydroxyl-apatite and strontium carbonate have been adopted as starting materials for preparing a regenerable sorbent, upon calcination. Both sorbents have been characterized in TG tests with an alternating atmosphere of CO2/Ar and Ar, accomplishing steps of carbonatation and calcination/regeneration at temperature over 900 °C. The apatite based sorbent maintained its capability of CO2 absorption for several cycles, whilst the Sr based sorbent exhibited a quick decay of its capability due to changes of the micro-structure. The CO2 carrying capacity after conditioning reached stable values of around 3% and 5% for apatite and strontium sorbents, respectively. TG curves were worked out in order to obtain kinetic data for both carbonatation and calcination, showing that apatite is slightly more reactive than strontium sorbent. The TG tests were also complemented by a fixed bed experiment aimed at demonstrating the feasibility of apatite regeneration with steam.https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/4918
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F. Miccio
F. Doghieri
E. Landi
spellingShingle F. Miccio
F. Doghieri
E. Landi
Insights into High Temperature Sorbents for Carbon Dioxide
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet F. Miccio
F. Doghieri
E. Landi
author_sort F. Miccio
title Insights into High Temperature Sorbents for Carbon Dioxide
title_short Insights into High Temperature Sorbents for Carbon Dioxide
title_full Insights into High Temperature Sorbents for Carbon Dioxide
title_fullStr Insights into High Temperature Sorbents for Carbon Dioxide
title_full_unstemmed Insights into High Temperature Sorbents for Carbon Dioxide
title_sort insights into high temperature sorbents for carbon dioxide
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2015-05-01
description This article reports on an experimental research dealing with the use of solid sorbents for CO2 uptake from gaseous stream at high temperature. Hydroxyl-apatite and strontium carbonate have been adopted as starting materials for preparing a regenerable sorbent, upon calcination. Both sorbents have been characterized in TG tests with an alternating atmosphere of CO2/Ar and Ar, accomplishing steps of carbonatation and calcination/regeneration at temperature over 900 °C. The apatite based sorbent maintained its capability of CO2 absorption for several cycles, whilst the Sr based sorbent exhibited a quick decay of its capability due to changes of the micro-structure. The CO2 carrying capacity after conditioning reached stable values of around 3% and 5% for apatite and strontium sorbents, respectively. TG curves were worked out in order to obtain kinetic data for both carbonatation and calcination, showing that apatite is slightly more reactive than strontium sorbent. The TG tests were also complemented by a fixed bed experiment aimed at demonstrating the feasibility of apatite regeneration with steam.
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/4918
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