4.8 Article

Design of steam-assisted temperature vacuum-swing adsorption processes for efficient CO2 capture from ambient air

Journal

RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
Volume 137, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rser.2020.110651

Keywords

Direct air capture; Energy consumption; Temperature vacuum swing adsorption; Steam purge; System optimization

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFB0603702]
  2. National Postdoctoral Program for Innovative Talent [BX20190198]
  3. National Science Foundation for Post-doctoral Scientists of China [20Z102060025]

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The study proposed a more efficient DAC system by designing a three-step steam-assisted temperature vacuum-swing adsorption (S-TVSA) cycle, which can reduce energy consumption, lower costs, and increase CO2 productivity.
Direct air capture (DAC) is an efficient, negative-carbon-emission technology that enables the capture of distributed emissions and removes location restrictions on capture facilities. However, current DAC demonstration plants are still too costly to be commercialized. In this work, a three-step steam-assisted temperature vacuum-swing adsorption (S-TVSA) cycle based on a packed column was designed for use in DAC systems, and the CO2 and H2O capacities and kinetics of the adsorbents were considered in detail. By operating the steam purge step at reduced pressures, steam at temperatures lower than 100 degrees C can be supplied by cheap thermal sources. In addition, the adsorption of H2O during the steam purge step can release heat for CO2 regeneration. Parameter sensitivity analysis reveals the trade-off relationship between the performance and energy consumption of DAC system with the S-TVSA cycle. The optimal case with a variational steam purge step operating at 90 degrees C and 0.3 bar achieves a CO2 productivity of 4.45 mol kg(-1) day(-1) and an energy requirement of 0.295 MJ mol(-1). If the heat energy for the purge steam comes from solar energy or low-grade industrial waste heat, which represents 80.6% of the total energy consumption, the DAC system with S-TVSA cycle will be competitive with post-combustion CO2 capture technologies. Note that the productivity can be increased by up to 280% with only 32.8% of the initial energy consumption by using novel adsorbents with higher capacities and kinetics, potentially making S-TVSA cycles highly efficient for DAC systems.

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