Issue 2, 2023

Thermal modulation of reaction equilibria controls mass transfer in CO2-binding organic liquids

Abstract

CO2-Binding organic liquids (CO2BOLs) are non-aqueous solvents which may reduce the parasitic energy of carbon capture processes. These solvents exhibit surprising mass transfer behavior: at fixed pressure driving force, the flux of CO2 into CO2BOLs decreases exponentially with increased temperature, a phenomenon not observed in aqueous amines. Here, we demonstrate that this phenomenon is primarily driven by a shift in reaction equilibrium, which reduces the degree to which chemical reactions enhance the CO2 flux. First-principles surface renewal models quantitatively reproduce mass transfer data for CO2 absorption into 2-EEMPA, IPADM-2-BOL and DBU:Hexanol across a range of temperatures. Density functional theory calculations are used to identify structural modifications likely to improve the CO2 flux. These findings reveal a fundamental trade-off between CO2 flux and the energy required for solvent regeneration, and provide a theoretical foundation for rational solvent design and the development of physics-informed mass transfer models.

Graphical abstract: Thermal modulation of reaction equilibria controls mass transfer in CO2-binding organic liquids

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Oct 2022
Accepted
16 Dec 2022
First published
23 Dec 2022
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Energy Environ. Sci., 2023,16, 484-490

Thermal modulation of reaction equilibria controls mass transfer in CO2-binding organic liquids

T. Moore, A. J. Varni, S. H. Pang, S. A. Akhade, S. Li, D. T. Nguyen and J. K. Stolaroff, Energy Environ. Sci., 2023, 16, 484 DOI: 10.1039/D2EE03237F

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