Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the primary component contributing to anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, necessitating the adoption of effective mitigation strategies to promote environmental sustainability. Among the various carbon capture methodologies, chemical absorption is acknowledged as the most scalable solution for post-combustion applications. This investigation presents a thorough, comparative, and scenario-based evaluation of both singular and blended amine solvents for CO2 capture within packed absorption–desorption columns. A validated rate-based model employing monoethanolamine (MEA) functions as the benchmark for executing process simulations. Three sequential scenarios are meticulously examined to switch the solvents and see the results. In the preliminary scenario, baseline performance is assessed by applying MEA to achieve the designated 73% removal target. Then the implementation of alternative solvents is examined—piperazine (PZ), a combination of methyldiethanolamine (MDEA) and PZ, and a blend of MEA and PZ—under uniform design parameters to ascertain their relative effectiveness and performance. In the second scenario, the design of the system is changed to reach a CO2 removal efficiency for MEA of 90%, and then MEA is switched to other solvents. In the final scenario, critical design parameters, including column height and diameter, are adjusted for each solvent system that did not meet the 90% capture efficiency in Scenario 2 to achieve 90% CO2 capture. A comprehensive sensitivity analysis is subsequently conducted on the adjusted systems to evaluate the influence of critical operational variables such as temperature, flue gas and solvent flow rates, and concentrations. Importantly, the MEA + PZ blend also demonstrated the lowest specific reboiler duty, as low as 4.28 MJ/kg CO2, highlighting its superior energy efficiency compared to other solvents in the condition that the system in this study is pilot-scale, not commercial-scale, and due to this reason, the energy consumption of the system is slightly higher than the reported value for the commercial-scale systems. The results yield invaluable insights into the performance trade-offs between singular and blended amines, thereby facilitating the development of more efficient CO2 capture systems that function within practical constraints.
Elmarghni et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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