Citation:
M. Wang, A. Lawal, P. Stephenson, J. Sidders, C. Ramshaw, Post-combustion CO2 capture with chemical absorption: a state-of-the-art review, Chemical Engineering Research and Design, Volume 89, Issue 9, September 2011, Pages 1609–1624.
Abstract:
Global concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere is increasing rapidly. CO2
emissions have an impact on global climate change. Effective CO2 emission
abatement strategies such as Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) are required to
combat this trend. There are three major approaches for CCS: post-combustion
capture, pre-combustion capture and oxyfuel process. Post-combustion capture
offers some advantages as existing combustion technologies can still be used
without radical changes on them. This makes post-combustion capture easier to
implement as a retrofit option (to existing power plants) compared to the other
two approaches. Therefore, post-combustion capture is probably the first
technology that will be deployed. This paper aims to provide a state-of-the-art
assessment of the research work carried out so far in post-combustion capture
with chemical absorption. The technology will be introduced first, followed by
required preparation of flue gas from power plants to use this technology. The
important research programmes worldwide and the experimental studies based on
pilot plants will be reviewed. This is followed by an overview of various
studies based on modelling and simulation. Then the focus is turned to review
development of different solvents and process intensification. Based on these,
we try to predict challenges and potential new developments from different
aspects such as new solvents, pilot plants, process heat integration (to improve
efficiency), modelling and simulation, process intensification and government
policy impact.