Abstract

Many MgO sorbents exhibit high CO2 uptake in the presence of high concentration CO2 and aided by high space velocity, which unfortunately leads to low CO2 capture efficiency from the gas stream. This study investigates the effect of Li/Na/K ratio on sorption performance in dilute CO2 streams (15% CO2) using alkali metal nitrates-promoted MgO sorbents at a low space velocity of 20 ml/g·min in fixed bed reactor. Study shows that the ratio of Li/Na/K in ternary alkali nitrate salt mixture significantly affects the induction periods for the second phase CO2 sorption, which is a key contributor to high CO2 uptake. High LiNO3 content in ternary mixture leads to long induction period, and therefore lower CO2 capacity during the 4 h period. Conversely, high ratios of NaNO3 and KNO3 leads to shorter induction periods. Among the samples, MgO with 9 mol% (Li0.18Na0.52K0.3) exhibits the highest CO2 sorption capacity of 5.56 mmol/g at 240°C in 4 h (20.6% CO2 capture efficiency) and 3.18 mmol/g after 5 cycles (10.8% CO2 capture efficiency). Comparative studies show that optimal temperatures for CO2 sorption are higher when using pure CO2 (280 to 320°C) than when using 15% CO2 (240°C) due to the thermodynamic equilibrium. CO2-TPD results indicate that CO2 desorption proceeds in two phases similar to CO2 sorption, and the presence of alkali salt in MgO also promotes the decomposition of bulk carbonate to CO2. It is shown that molten salt migration and agglomeration of MgO particles are likely the factors that lead to decline in CO2 uptake over the sorption-desorption cycles.

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