Reactive capture using metal looping: the effect of oxygen.

Faraday Discuss

UK Centre for Carbon Dioxide Utilization, Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, University of Sheffield, Sir Robert Hadfield Building, Sheffield, UK.

Published: July 2021

In the effort to create a sustainable future economy, the ability to directly convert dilute gas-phase CO in waste gas streams into useful products would be a valuable tool, which may be achievable using Grignard reagents as both the capture and the conversion materials. The magnesium salt by-product can be recovered, and metallic magnesium regenerated through conventional high-efficiency electrolysis. This stoichiometric approach is known as metal looping, where the magnesium acts as the energy vector for the capture and conversion, allowing both to occur at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. However, the process has only previously been demonstrated with 12% CO in nitrogen mixtures. If we consider this process in a real post-combustion flue gas conversion scenario, the sensitivity of Grignard reagents to other gases (and water vapour) must be considered. While some of these gases and the water vapour are relatively easily removed, in most flue gas streams the most common other gas present, oxygen, would be far more challenging to excise, and oxygen is known to react with Grignard reagents, albeit slowly. In order to determine if higher oxygen concentrations could be tolerated, allowing the possibility of a variety of relatively inexpensive and possibly profitable direct CO conversion pathways to be developed, a range of industrially relevant CO/O mixtures were made and carefully bubbled through phenylmagnesium bromide solutions.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1fd00001bDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

grignard reagents
12
metal looping
8
gas streams
8
capture conversion
8
flue gas
8
gases water
8
water vapour
8
reactive capture
4
capture metal
4
oxygen
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!