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    Durability of CaO–CaZrO<sub>3</sub> Sorbents for High-Temperature CO<sub>2</sub> Capture Prepared by a Wet Chemical Method

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    Powders of CaO sorbent modified with CaZrO<sub>3</sub> have been synthesized by a wet chemical route. For carbonation and calcination conditions relevant to sorbent-enhanced steam reforming applications, a powder of composition 10 wt % CaZrO<sub>3</sub>/90 wt % CaO showed an initial rise in CO<sub>2</sub> uptake capacity in the first 10 carbonation–decarbonation cycles, increasing from 0.31 g of CO<sub>2</sub>/g of sorbent in cycle 1 to 0.37 g of CO<sub>2</sub>/g of sorbent in cycle 10 and stabilizing at this value for the remainder of the 30 cycles tested, with carbonation at 650 °C in 15% CO<sub>2</sub> and calcination at 800 °C in air. Under more severe conditions of calcination at 950 °C in 100% CO<sub>2</sub>, following carbonation at 650 °C in 100% CO<sub>2</sub>, the best overall performance was for a sorbent with 30 wt % CaZrO<sub>3</sub>/70 wt % CaO (the highest Zr ratio studied), with an initial uptake of 0.36 g of CO<sub>2</sub>/g of sorbent, decreasing to 0.31 g of CO<sub>2</sub>/g of sorbent at the 30th cycle. Electron microscopy revealed that CaZrO<sub>3</sub> was present in the form of ≤0.5 μm cuboid and 20–80 nm particles dispersed within a porous matrix of CaO/CaCO<sub>3</sub>; the nanoparticles are considered to be the principal reason for promoting multicycle durability
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