1,280 research outputs found
Mass transfer characteristics in structured packing for CO2 emission reduction processes
Acid gas treating and CO2 capture from flue gas by absorption have gained wide importance over the past few decades. With the implementation of more stringent environmental regulations and the awareness of the greenhouse effect, the need for efficient removal of acid gases such as CO2 (carbon dioxide) has increased significantly. Therefore, additional effort for research in this field is inevitable. For flue gas processes the ratio of absorption solvent to gas throughput is very different compared to acid gas treating processes owing to the atmospheric pressures and the dilution effect of combustion air. Moreover, in flue gas applications pressure drop is a very important process parameter. Packing types are required that allow for low pressure drop in combination with high interfacial areas at low liquid loading per square meter. The determination of interfacial areas in gas-liquid contactors by means of the chemical method (Danckwerts, P. V. Gas-liquid reactions; McGraw-Hill: London, 1970) has been very frequently applied. Unfortunately, many of the model systems proposed in the literature are reversible and therefore this condition possibly is not met. Versteeg et al. (Versteeg, G. F.; Kuipers, J. A. M.; Beckum, F. P. H.; van Swaaij, W. P. M. Chem. Eng. Sci. 1989, 44, 2292) have demonstrated that for reversible reactions the conditions for the determination of the interfacial area by means of the chemical method are much more severe. In a study by Raynal et al. (Raynal, L.; Ballaguet, J. P.; Berrere-Tricca, C. Chem. Eng. Sci. 2004, 59, 5395), it has been shown that there is a dependency of the interfacial area on the packing height. Unfortunately, most model systems used, e.g., CO2-caustic soda (as used by Raynal et al.), are much more complex and consist of (a set of) reversible reaction(s). The natures of these systems make the conditions at which the interfacial area can be determined much more severe and put more limitations on the process conditions and experimental equipment than a priori can be expected. Therefore, an extended absorption model is required to determine the conditions at which the interfacial area can be measured without detailed knowledge of the values of the liquid-side mass transfer coefficient, k1, beforehand.
Structure and activity relationships for amine-based CO2 absorbents-II
A study to determine the structure and activity relationships of various amine-based CO2 absorbents was performed, in which the absorption of pure CO2 at atmospheric pressure was measured to assess the total absorption rates and capacities. Steric hindrance effect was noticed when side chain with alkyl group was present at the α-carbon to the amine group in the absorbent structure. An increase in the number of amine groups in absorbent structure, results in a higher capacity of upto 3.03 moles CO2/moles amine. Aromatic amines substituted with alkyl groups at the 2nd and 5th position show an increase in both absorption rate and capacity. © 2008 The Institution of Chemical Engineers
Kinetics of absorption of carbon dioxide in aqueous ammonia solutions
AbstractIn the present work the absorption of carbon dioxide into aqueous ammonia solutions has been studied in a stirred cell reactor, at low temperatures and ammonia concentrations ranging from 0.1 to about 7 kmol m−3. The absorption experiments were carried out at conditions where the so-called pseudo first order mass transfer regime was obeyed–and hence the kinetics of the reaction between carbon dioxide and ammonia could be derived. The results were interpreted according to the well-established zwitterion mechanism
Gas solubility of H2S and CO2 in aqueous solutions of N-methyldiethanolamine
Alkanolamine processes are used in the industry to remove acid gases, like CO2, H2S and other sulphur components, from natural gas and industrial gas streams. In this process the acid components react with the basic alkanolamine solution via an exothermic, reversible reaction in a gas/liquid absorber. The composition of these amine solutions is continuously changed to optimise the (selective) removal of the several acid components. For the design of gas treating equipment accurate mass transfer, reaction kinetics and solubility data of acid gases in aqueous alkanolamine solutions are required. In this paper new solubility data of H2S and CO2 in aqueous MDEA at different conditions encountered in modern gas treating facilities are presented. The experimental pressure and temperature were varied from 6.9 to 69 bar (methane was used as make-up gas) and from 10 to 25 °C respectively. These new solubility data were evaluated and correlated with an Electrolyte Equation of State Model (EOS) as originally proposed by Fürst and Renon [Fürst, W., Renon, H., 1993. Representation of Excess Properties of Electrolyte Solutions Using a New Equation of State. AIChE J., 39 (2), pp. 335.]. The application of Equation of State Models for the prediction of VLE data for reactive, ionic systems is a rather new development in this field.
Hollow fiber membrane contactor as a gas-liquid model contactor
Microporous hollow fiber gas-liquid membrane contactors have a fixed and well-defined gas-liquid interfacial area. The liquid flow through the hollow fiber is laminar, thus the liquid side hydrodynamics are well known. This allows the accurate calculation of the fiber side physical mass transfer coefficient from first principles. Moreover, in the case of gas-liquid membrane contactor, the gas-liquid exposure time can be varied easily and independently without disturbing the gas-liquid interfacial area. These features of the hollow fiber membrane contactor make it very suitable as a gas-liquid model contactor and offer numerous advantages over the conventional model contactors. The applicability and the limitations of this novel model contactor for the determination of physico-chemical properties of non-reactive and reactive gas-liquid systems are investigated in the present work. Absorption of CO 2 into water and into aqueous NaOH solutions are chosen as model systems to determine the physico-chemical properties for non-reactive and reactive conditions, respectively. The experimental findings for these systems show that a hollow fiber membrane contactor can be used successfully as a model contactor for the determination of various gas-liquid physico-chemical properties. Moreover, since the membrane contactor facilitates indirect contact between the two phases, the application of hollow fiber model contactor can possibly be extended to liquid-liquid systems and/or heterogeneous catalyzed gas-liquid systems
RAFT Polymerization of a Biorenewable/Sustainable Monomer via a Green Process
A biorenewable polymer is synthesized via a green process using the RAFT principle for the first time in supercritical CO2 at 300 bar and 80 °C. α-Methylene-γ-butyrolactone polymers of various chain lengths and molecular weights are obtained. The molecular weights vary from 10 000 up to 20 000 with low polydispersity indexes (PDI <1.5). Furthermore, the monomer conversion in supercritical CO2 is substantially higher, respectively 85% for ScCO2 compared to ≈65% for polymerizations conducted in dimethyl formamide (DMF) solvent. Chain extensions are carried out to confirm the livingness of the formed polymers in ScCO2. This opens up future possibilities of the formation of different polymer architectures in ScCO2. The polymers synthesized in ScCO2 have glass transition temperature (Tg) values ranging from 155 up to 190 °C. However, the presence of residual monomer encapsulated inside the formed polymer matrix affects the glass transition of the polymer that is lowered by increasing monomer concentrations. Hence, additional research is required to eliminate the remaining monomer concentration in the polymer matrix in order to arrive at the optimal Tg
The character of Vermont : twentieth-anniversary reflections
Occasional paper (University of Vermont. Center for Research on Vermont) ; no. 19.
pt. 1. The character of Vermont : then and now / Michael Sherman and Jennie Versteeg -- pt. 2. Vermont research and the center for research on Vermont / Samuel B. Hand, Paul Gillies
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