Abstract

The feasibility of gas-liquid hollow fibre membrane contactors for the chemical absorption of carbon dioxide (CO2) into ammonia (NH3), coupled with the crystallisation of ammonium bicarbonate has been demonstrated. In this study, the mechanism of chemically facilitated heterogeneous membrane crystallisation is described, and the solution chemistry required to initiate nucleation elucidated. Induction time for nucleation was dependent on the rate of CO2 absorption, as this governed solution bicarbonate concentration. However, for low NH3 solution concentrations, a reduction in pH was observed with progressive CO2 absorption which shifted equilibria toward ammonium and carbonic acid, inhibiting both absorption and nucleation. An excess of free NH3 buffered pH suitably to balance equilibria to the onset of supersaturation, which ensured sufficient bicarbonate availability to initiate nucleation. Following induction at a supersaturation level of 1.7 (3.3 M NH3), an increase in crystal population density and crystal size was observed at progressive levels of supersaturation which contradicts the trend ordinarily observed for homogeneous nucleation in classical crystallisation technology, and demonstrates the role of the membrane as a physical substrate for heterogeneous nucleation during chemically reactive crystallisation. Both nucleation rate and crystal growth rate increased with increasing levels of supersaturation. This can be ascribed to the relatively low chemical driving force imposed by the shift in equilibrium toward ammonium which suppressed solution reactivity, together with the role of the membrane in promoting counter-current diffusion of CO2 and NH3 into the concentration boundary layer developed at the membrane wall, which permitted replenishment of reactants at the site of nucleation, and is a unique facet specific to this method of membrane facilitated crystallisation. Free ammonia concentration was shown to govern nucleation rate where a limiting NH3 concentration was identified above which crystallisation induced membrane scaling was observed. Provided the chemically reactive membrane crystallisation reactor was operated below this threshold, a consistent (size and number) and reproducible crystallised reaction product was collected downstream of the membrane, which evidenced that sustained membrane operation should be achievable with minimum reactive maintenance intervention.

Highlights

  • The use of packed columns for the absorption of carbon dioxide (CO2) has received significant attention over the past decade, for their potential to facilitate carbon capture and storage (CCS) as well as enabling CO2 separation from biogas for the production of biomethane; this latter application representing one of the fastest growing areas for gas-liquid separation technology [1]

  • The 4.6 molNH3 L-1 (M NH3) solution sustained a higher pH at supersaturation which subsequently favoured HCO3- formation at induction (Fig. 6b). We suggest that it is the increased availability of HCO3- provided by the buffering capacity of the 4.6 M NH3 solution which increased nucleation rate and induced surface scaling

  • The two-stage decline in CO2 flux caused by the reduction in solution pH and the subsequent shift in ammonia-ammonium and carbamatecarbonate-bicarbonate equilibrium demonstrated that a minimum free ammonia concentration is demanded to sustain pH to ensure there is sufficient bicarbonate in the reaction zone at supersaturation to facilitate heterogeneous nucleation

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Summary

Introduction

The use of packed columns for the absorption of carbon dioxide (CO2) has received significant attention over the past decade, for their potential to facilitate carbon capture and storage (CCS) as well as enabling CO2 separation from biogas for the production of biomethane; this latter application representing one of the fastest growing areas for gas-liquid separation technology [1]. In both applications, chemically reactive solvents have been employed as a method of process intensifi­ cation [2,3]. The overall chemical reaction can be described as: NH4þ ðaqÞ þ HCOÀ3 ðaqÞ ↔ NH4HCO3ðsÞ (1)

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