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Modelling a Membrane Contactor for CO2 Capture

Gebremariam, Solomon Kahsay
Master thesis
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2458486
Utgivelsesdato
2017
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  • Institutt for kjemisk prosessteknologi [1427]
Sammendrag
Chemical absorption of CO2 in conventional absorbers is the most mature and preferred

technology today for post-combustion CO2 capture. However, two major bottlenecks of

this technology are the large solvent regeneration energy requirement and the large equipment size. Due to their much higher surface area to volume ratio, membrane contactors

have been suggested as a promising alternative for absorber size reduction. Furthermore,

some novel solvents with low regeneration energy requirement compared to the benchmark solvent (30wt% MEA) have been identified recently. However, at the price of high

volatility, which could lead to solvent losses/emissions when applied in the conventional

absorbers. The use of membrane contactors has also been suggested to overcome this

problem.

Several studies have been performed on CO2 absorption using membrane contactors,

but most of them were conducted at laboratory-scale. Due to the large volume of flue

gases coming from power plants, studies focusing on the modelling and design of large-scale membrane contactors are required. The objective of this thesis has been to develop a

comprehensive two-dimensional mathematical model for CO2 absorption in aqueous MEA

solution in a hollow fiber membrane contactor (HFMC). The developed HFMC model has

been applied for simulation of CO2 absorption from a flue gas of an 800 MWe coal-fired

power plant. This was intended to study the opportunities and challenges of the modelling,

and design of CO2 absorption in large-scale HFMC modules.

The HFMC model is based on mass and heat balance equations for the shell, membrane, and tube sides of the HFMC module. Reversible chemical reactions between CO2

and MEA and the heat of CO2 absorption are considered in the model. The radial variations of the diffusion coefficients of the species in the liquid-phase due to the radial viscosity gradient are also implemented in the model. A rigorous equilibrium model is employed

to estimate the equilibrium partial pressure of CO2 and the initial chemical speciation in

the CO2-MEA-H2O system. The set of partial differential equations in the HFMC model

is developed in the programming language MATLAB and solved using the method of

lines/finite difference method.

The influence of changing the gas-phase velocity, liquid-phase velocity, solvent lean

loading, membrane fiber length, and membrane mass transfer coefficient on the CO2 capture performance of HFMC modules were studied. Results reveal that increasing the gas-phase velocity and membrane mass transfer coefficient, and decreasing the membrane fiber

length enhance CO2 absorption flux. In addition, increasing the membrane fiber length and

membrane mass transfer coefficient, and decreasing the gas-phase velocity enhance CO2

removal efficiency. Solvent lean loading and liquid-phase velocity have a negligible effect

on the performance of the HFMC modules. It was concluded that the main mass transfer

resistance is in the membrane.

Based on the sensitivity analysis, the membrane fiber length was optimized to capture

90% CO2 from the flue gas of the 800 MWe power plant. The volume of the HFMC modules required for 90% CO2 capture was compared with that of a structured packed column

applied for the same case study from the literature. Results show that the HFMC modules

provide a reduced absorber volume (by 86%) and flexibility. However, the study suggested that several challenges, limitations, and factors should be considered in the design

of industrial-scale HFMC modules. These are a precise estimation of the membrane mass

transfer coefficient, gas-phase and liquid-phase pressure drops, limitations in the size of

commercial HFMC modules, lifetime of membranes, and choice of shell-side vs tube-side

liquid-phase flow. The developed HFMC model predicts an axial and radial concentration

and temperature profiles in the liquid-phase. Results show, during 90% CO2 capture, an

excellent radial heat transfer and an axial temperature rise by 20 K in the liquid phase.

The HFMC model results were finally compared with pilot-scale experimental data

from the literature. Based on the comparison, the challenges of predicting the performance

of large-scale HFMC modules are discussed. The limitations of the developed HFMC

model when applied to the simulation of large-scale HFMC modules are also critically

discussed.
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