Abstract

AbstractCarbonic anhydrase (CA) is an attractive biodegradable catalyst for CO2 absorption in solvent‐based CO2 capture. However, maintaining the stability of CA as a homogeneous component of the solvents is a challenge. Solvent regeneration temperature typically exceeds the enzyme thermal tolerance, which leads to CA deactivation. To reduce the need for frequent CA replenishment and to avoid inactive CA accumulation in the solvent, this work shows the benefits of an immobilization strategy where CA is fixed in a second‐generation design of textile structured packing (CATSP‐2) modules. The enzyme‐immobilized packing showed 1.5 times better performance in CO2 separation compared with traditional structured packing with a corresponding increased CO2 loading in the rich solvent. The modules exhibited good CA activity retention of ~80% during the tests without any CA replenishment. Applying CATSP‐2 could potentially decrease the packing height and absorber column size for a lower cost per amount of CO2 captured.

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