Readily regenerable amine-free CO sorbent based on a solid-supported carboxylate ionic liquid.

J Environ Manage

Department of Chemical Engineering, Universitat Rovira i Virgili (URV), Av. Països Catalans 26, 43007, Tarragona, Spain. Electronic address:

Published: May 2023

Accumulation of anthropogenic CO is undoubtedly the major cause of global warming. In addition to reducing emissions, minimising the threatening effects of climate change in the near future might also require the capture of enormous amounts of CO from point sources or from the atmosphere. In this regard, the development of novel affordable and energetically attainable capture technologies is greatly needed. In this work, we report rapid and greatly facilitated CO desorption for amine-free carboxylate ionic liquid hydrates as compared to a benchmark amine-based sorbent. Complete regeneration was achieved at moderate temperature (60 °C) over short capture-release cycles using model flue gas on a silica-supported tetrabutylphosphonium acetate ionic liquid hydrate (IL/SiO), whereas the polyethyleneimine counterpart (PEI/SiO) only recovered half its capacity after the first cycle in a rather sluggish release process under the same conditions. The IL/SiO sorbent achieved a slightly superior working CO capacity than PEI/SiO. The easier regeneration of carboxylate ionic liquid hydrates, which behave as chemical CO sorbents leading to bicarbonate in a 1:1 stoichiometry, is due to their relatively low sorption enthalpies (≈40 kJ mol). The faster and more efficient desorption from IL/SiO fits a first-order kinetic model (k = 0.73 min), whereas a more complex process was observed for PEI/SiO (pseudo-first order initially, k = 0.11 min, pseudo-zero order at later stages). The remarkably low regeneration temperature, the absence of amines and the non-volatility of the IL sorbent are favourable assets to minimise gaseous stream contamination. Importantly, regeneration heats -a crucial parameter for practical application- are advantageous for IL/SiO (4.3 kJ g (CO)) vs. PEI/SiO, and fall within the range of typical amine sorbents indicating a remarkable performance at this proof-of-concept stage. Further structural design will enhance the viability of amine-free ionic liquid hydrates for carbon capture technologies.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.117469DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ionic liquid
20
carboxylate ionic
12
liquid hydrates
12
capture technologies
8
ionic
5
liquid
5
regenerable amine-free
4
sorbent
4
amine-free sorbent
4
sorbent based
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!