화학공학소재연구정보센터
Chemical Engineering Journal, Vol.171, No.3, 725-733, 2011
Aqueous piperazine as the new standard for CO2 capture technology
Amine scrubbing will be the technology of choice for CO2 capture from coal-fired power plants. 7 m monoethanolamine (30 wt% MEA) has been the standard solvent to represent the capability of this technology. This paper presents a new standard process that uses 8 m piperazine (40 wt% PZ) with regeneration at 150 degrees C by a two-stage flash. The performance data for the piperazine system is nonproprietary and available for standard comparisons. The expected energy requirement for a piperazine or other advanced amine scrubbing processes will approach 220 kWh/tonnes CO2 removed. The minimum work for this separation is 113 kWh/tonnes. The major exergy losses (kWh/tonnes CO2) in the piperazine process are: condenser, 34; exchanger, 25: compressor, 22; absorber, 14. Because mechanical adiabatic compression has an overall thermodynamic efficiency of 55-60%, amine scrubbing with thermal swing regeneration provides better energy performance with greater heat of CO2 absorption and maximum regeneration temperature. Piperazine can be used up to 150 degrees C without significant thermal degradation. This allows better energy performance and minimizes the impacts of degradation products. The piperazine solvent is resistant to oxidative degradation, has less volatility than MEA, and is not corrosive to stainless steel. It is also suitable for reclaiming by distillation and other methods already commercialized by the gas treating industry. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.