Energy Minimization and Ammonia Abatement for CO2 Capture Using a Blend of Ammonia and 2-Amino-2-Methyl-1-Propanol Solution
- Authors
- Asif, Muhammad; Bak, Chul-u; Kim, Woo-Seung
- Issue Date
- Jul-2015
- Publisher
- TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
- Keywords
- post-combustion; CO2 capture; AMP; greenhouse gases; ammonia based
- Citation
- SEPARATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, v.50, no.10, pp 1565 - 1576
- Pages
- 12
- Indexed
- SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- SEPARATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
- Volume
- 50
- Number
- 10
- Start Page
- 1565
- End Page
- 1576
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/17508
- DOI
- 10.1080/01496395.2014.976880
- ISSN
- 0149-6395
1520-5754
- Abstract
- An aqueous ammonia based CO2 capture offers several advantages over the conventional monoethanolamine (MEA) solvent, including a high CO2 loading capacity, low stripper heat duty, a lower degradation rate of solvent, low equipment corrosion, and the ability to capture multipollutants. However, in order to make an aqueous, ammonia-based CO2 capturing process economically feasible, attention must be paid to the following issues: ammonia slip due to the high evaporation rate of ammonia, energy input for CO2 regeneration, and CO2 removal efficiency improvements. In conventional, aqueous ammonia-based CO2 capture, the process either needs to operate at very low temperatures or must include wash-water columns to mitigate ammonia slips, which increase the capital and operational costs of the system. In this paper, a blended solution of 2-amino-2-methyl-1-propanol (AMP) and ammonia was used to analyze the CO2 capture efficiency, ammonia slip, and stripper heat duty. Our results show that, using the blended (30 wt.% AMP + 3 wt.% NH3) solution for CO2 capture, the ammonia slip was reduced by 64% at a lean CO2 loading of 0.07, CO2 capture efficiency was increased by 17.2%, and the heat duty requirement for CO2 regeneration was reduced by 80% at a stripper inlet temperature of 60 degrees C. Moreover, the loss of AMP due to evaporation was 0.042 kg/day.
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