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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A predictive thermodynamic model for an aqueous blend of potassium carbonate, piperazine, and monoethanolamine for carbon dioxide capture from flue gas

Hilliard, Marcus Douglas, 1977- 29 August 2008 (has links)
The Electrolyte Nonrandom Two-Liquid Activity Coefficient model in Aspen PlusTM 2006.5 was used to develop a rigorous and consistent thermodynamic representation for the base sub-component systems associated with aqueous combinations of K₂CO₃, KHCO₃, MEA, and piperazine (PZ) in a mixed-solvent electrolyte system for the application of CO₂ absorption/stripping from coal fired power plants. We developed a new vapor-liquid equilibrium apparatus to measure CO₂, amine, and H2O vapor pressures at 40 and 60 oC. We found that the volatility of MEA and PZ can be approximated at 50 and 20 ppmv at 40°C for any solvent composition studied in this work, over the CO₂ partial pressure range from 0.01 to 0.1 kPa. Very few solvent compositions exhibited a greater differential capacity than 7 m MEA at 60°C; specifically 11 m MEA, 3.5 m MEA + 3.6 m PZ, 7 m MEA + 2 m PZ, 7 m MEA + 3.6 m PZ, and 5 m K+ + 7 m MEA + 3.6 m PZ. Piperazine exhibited a possible maximum differential capacity of 2.21 mole CO₂/kg-H₂O at a concentration of 7.3 m. At the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Inna Kim determined the differential enthalpy of CO₂ absorption for aqueous combinations of K₂CO₃, KHCO₃, MEA, PZ, and CO₂, based on a consistent experimental method developed for MEA, from 40 to 120°C for use in this work. In addition, we developed a consistent method to measure the specific heat capacity for a number of similar solvent combinations. We found that the enthalpy of CO₂ absorption increased with temperature because the apparent partial heat capacity of CO₂ may be considered small. Finally, by using a differential scanning calorimeter, we determined the dissolution temperature for aqueous mixtures of unloaded piperazine, which inferred an effective operating range for solutions of concentrated piperazine, greater than 5 m PZ, over a loading range between 0.25 to 0.45 mole CO₂/2·mol PZ. Through unit cell x-ray diffraction, we were able to identify and characterize the presence of three solid phases (PZ·6H₂O, KHCO₃, and KvPZ(COO)₂) in aqueous mixture combinations of K₂CO₃, KHCO₃, PZ, and CO₂. / text
2

Carbon dioxide thermodynamics, kinetics, and mass transfer in aqueous piperazine derivatives and other amines

Chen, Xi, 1981- 22 September 2011 (has links)
To screen amine solvents for application in CO2 capture from coal-fired power plants, the equilibrium CO2 partial pressure and liquid film mass transfer coefficient were characterized for CO2-loaded and highly concentrated aqueous amines at 40 – 100 °C over a range of CO2 loading with a Wetted Wall Column (WWC). The acyclic amines tested were ethylenediamine, 1,2-diaminopropane, diglycolamine®, methyldiethanolamine (MDEA)/Piperazine (PZ), 3-(methylamino)propylamine, 2-amino-2-methyl-1-propanol and 2-amino-2-methyl-1-propanol/PZ. The cyclic amines tested were piperazine derivatives including proline, 2-piperidineethanol, N-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine, 1-(2-aminoethyl)piperazine, N-methylpiperazine (NMPZ), 2-methylpiperazine (2MPZ), 2,5-trans-dimethylpiperazine, 2MPZ/PZ, and PZ/NMPZ/1,4-dimethylpiperazine (1,4-DMPZ). The cyclic CO2 capacity and heat of CO2 absorption were estimated with a semi-empirical vapor-liquid-equilibrium model. 5 m MDEA/5 m PZ, 8 m 2MPZ, 4 m 2MPZ/4 m PZ and 3.75 m PZ/3.75 m NMPZ/0.5 m 1,4-DMPZ were identified as promising solvent candidates for their large CO2 capacity, fast mass transfer rate and moderately high heat of absorption. The speciation in 8 m 2MPZ and 4 m 2MPZ / 4 m PZ at 40 °C at varied CO2 loading was investigated using quantitative 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. In 8 m 2MPZ at 40 °C over the CO2 loading range of 0 – 0.37 mol CO2/mol alkalinity, more than 75% of the dissolved CO2 exists in the form of unhindered 2MPZ monocarbamate, and the rest is in the form of bicarbonate and dicarbamate; 19% - 56% of 2MPZ is converted to 2MPZ carbamate at 0.1 - 0.37 mol CO2/mol alkalinity. A rigorous thermodynamic model was developed for 8 m 2MPZ in the framework of the Electrolyte Nonrandom Two-Liquid (ENRTL) model. At 40 °C, the reaction stoichiometry for 2MPZ and CO2 is around 2 at lean loading but diminishes to 0 at rich loading. Bicarbonate becomes the major product at CO2 loading greater than 0.35 mol/mol alkalinity. The predicted heat of CO2 absorption is 75 kJ/mol at 140 °C and decreases with temperature when CO2 loading is above 0.25. The mass transfer rate data for 8 m 2MPZ was represented with a rate-based WWC model created in Aspen Plus®. The reaction rate was described with termolecular mechanism on an activity basis. With minor CO2 loading adjustment and regression of pre-exponential kinetic constants and diffusion activation energy, a majority of the measured CO2 fluxes in the WWC experiments were fitted by the model within ±20% over 40 – 100 °C and 0.1 – 0.37 mol CO2/mol alkalinity. The diffusion activation energy for 8 m 2MPZ at the rich loading is about 28 kJ/mol. The activity-based reaction rate constant at 40 °C for 2MPZ carbamate formation catalyzed by 2MPZ is 1.94×1010 kmol/m3•s. The calculated liquid film mass transfer coefficients are in close agreement with the experimental values. The liquid film mass transfer rate is dependent on the diffusion coefficients of amine and CO2 to the same extent at lean loading and 40 °C. The sum of the powers for the two diffusivities is approximately equal to 0.5 over the loading range of 0 – 0.4 mol CO2/mol alkalinity. The sum of the powers for the dependence of the liquid film mass transfer coefficient on the carbamate formation rate constants (k2MPZ-2MPZ and k2MPZCOO--2MPZ) approaches 0.5 at very lean loading at low temperature, but it decreases as CO2 loading and temperature is increased. At 100 °C, the physical liquid film mass transfer coefficient is the most important factor that determines the liquid mass transfer rate. The pseudo-first order region shifts to higher range of physical liquid film transfer coefficient as temperature increases. / text

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