A cost-effective, energy-efficient sorbent regeneration process for phase-changing guanidines used for CO2 capture was developed based on direct-steam stripping. This approach enhances the regeneration rate, simplifies the overall CO2 capture process, and reduces the energy cost compared to conventional conductive thermal regeneration. A direct-steam sorbent regeneration reactor was developed, demonstrating that aqueous bis(iminoguanidines) (BIG) sorbents, e.g., methylglyoxal-bis(iminoguanidine) (MGBIG) and glyoxal-bis(iminoguanidine) (GBIG), could be efficiently regenerated with up to ∼ 99 % CO2 recovery through direct-steam stripping. Using low-temperature steam at 100 °C, a 4.5 times faster regeneration rate for GBIG carbonate sorbent (e.g., 30 min for 10 g) was demonstrated compared to conductive-heating (e.g., 135 min for 10 g) at 130 °C. Additionally, fully regenerated MGBIG converts into an aqueous MGBIG solution when the steam condenses onto the sorbent surface. Condensed steam with the guanidine can be easily recycled as an aqueous solution into the gas–liquid contactor to achieve a continuous-flow CO2-capture process. Molecular dynamics simulation was employed to provide a better understanding of the process. Higher heat transfer rates from steam to guanidine carbonate, compared to air heating, were attributed to the vibration resonance of water molecules within MGBIG with that of vapor molecules and the effective transfer of kinetic energy from vapor to solid. Technoeconomic analysis demonstrated that direct-steam stripping significantly decreases the CO2 capture cost by 50 % compared to traditional conductive heating methods. Enhanced mass transfer facilitated by low-temperature steam and subsequent condensation effectively heats up the H2O-containing BIG-carbonate crystals, facilitating the desorption of CO2 from the solid crystals, thereby leading to fast, effective, and energy-efficient sorbent regeneration.
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