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1.
Environ Sci Technol ; 54(11): 6900-6907, 2020 06 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32374592

ABSTRACT

We have developed a new class of sodium carbonate/silicone composite sorbents that selectively capture carbon dioxide (CO2) and can purify biogas to natural gas pipeline-quality biomethane. These nontoxic composites can be three-dimensionally printed or extruded at low costs, can have high specific CO2 sorption rates (in excess of 5 µmol s-1 g-1 bar-1) and high selectivity due to their chemical mechanism, and can be regenerated with low-energy air stripping. Therefore, these composite sorbents combine the high selectivity of liquid sorbents with the high specific sorption rates and low regeneration energies found in many solid sorbents. We characterized these composite sorbents with X-ray computed tomography, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and X-ray diffraction (XRD). Furthermore, we measured composite sorption capacities of up to 0.62 mol CO2 kg-1 and recorded breakthrough curves in a flow-through, fixed-bed reactor using both simulated biogas and locally sourced industrial biogas. Additional tests of the composite sorbent were carried out with pure CO2 in a sealed pressure drop apparatus. This experimental data was used to validate a numerical model of the setup and to simulate an industrial-scale biogas upgrading process. Finally, we performed a preliminary technoeconomic analysis for this upgrading process and found that this composite sorbent can upgrade biogas at a lower cost (∼$0.97 per GJ) than other currently implemented techniques.


Subject(s)
Biofuels , Carbonates , Carbon Dioxide , Natural Gas
2.
Environ Sci Technol ; 53(5): 2926-2936, 2019 03 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30758198

ABSTRACT

We encapsulated six solvents with novel physical and chemical properties for CO2 sorption within gas-permeable polymer shells, creating Micro-Encapsulated CO2 Sorbents (MECS), to improve the CO2 absorption kinetics and handling of the solvents for postcombustion CO2 capture from flue gas. The solvents were sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) solution, uncatalyzed and with two different promoters, two ionic liquid (IL) solvents, and one CO2-binding organic liquid (CO2BOL). We subjected each of the six MECS to multiple CO2 absorption and regeneration cycles and measured the working CO2 absorption capacity as a function of time to identify promising candidate MECS for large-scale carbon capture. We discovered that the uncatalyzed Na2CO3 and Na2CO3-sarcosine MECS had lower CO2 absorption rates relative to Na2CO3-cyclen MECS over 30 min of absorption, while the CO2BOL Koechanol appeared to permeate through the capsule shell and is thus unsuitable. We rigorously tested the most promising three MECS (Na2CO3-cyclen, IL NDIL0309, and IL NDIL0230) by subjecting each of them to a series of 10 absorption/stripping cycles. The CO2 absorption curves were highly reproducible for these three MECS across 10 cycles, demonstrating successful absorption/regeneration without degradation. As the CO2 absorption rate is dynamic in time and the CO2 loading per mass varies among the three most promising MECS, the process design parameters will ultimately dictate the selection of MECS solvent.

3.
RSC Adv ; 12(6): 3721-3728, 2022 Jan 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35425363

ABSTRACT

Exceptionally coercive SmCo5 particles are produced through calcium vapor reduction of SmCo5O9 powders synthesized by flame spray pyrolysis. The resulting powders are composed of oblate hexagonal particles approximately 2 microns across with smooth surfaces. This microstructure yields record-breaking room temperature coercivity H c,i >80 kOe, or >60 kOe when combined with advanced manufacturing approaches such as electrophoretic deposition or molding with tetraglyme inks. These techniques enable straightforward low-loss fabrication of bulk parts. The high coercivity is extremely robust at elevated temperatures, exceeding 10 kOe even at 600 °C. The oxide precursor approach removes the need for strict environmental control during synthesis that is common to other nanoparticle-based routes and can readily be scaled to kilogram quantities of feedstock production. Magnet powders produced by calcium vapor reduction can thus function as the building blocks for traditional or advanced manufacturing techniques, while the high coercivity enables consistent performance across a wide range of temperatures.

4.
RSC Adv ; 11(37): 22633-22639, 2021 Jun 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35480472

ABSTRACT

Nanofabrication techniques that can generate large and complex 3D structures with nanoscale features are becoming increasingly important in the fields of biomedicine, micro-optics, and microfluidics. Direct laser writing via two-photon polymerization (DLW-TPP) is one such technique that relies on nonlinear absorption of light to form nanoscale 3D features. Although DLW-TPP provides the required nanoscale resolution, its built height is often limited to less than a millimetre. This height limitation is driven by the need to tightly focus the laser beam at arbitrary depths within the photopolymer. This requirement necessitates matching the photopolymer's refractive index to specific values but the required techniques have not been disseminated widely in the open scientific literature. To address this knowledge gap, we test two universal, different approaches to generate refractive index-matched polymeric and preceramic resins and demonstrate their performance by printing of fine submicron features in 3D structures as tall as 2.5 mm. Specifically, we achieve index-matching by mixing commercially-available resins or covalent modification of functional monomers. This work investigates the relationship of voxel shape to RI mismatch, and presents tuning of RI through mixing and covalent modification to a nonconventional material system of preceramic resin which has never been demonstrated before. We demonstrate the material flexibility by generating 3D silicon oxycarbide structures from preceramic resists while simultaneously eliminating the part-height limitation of conventional DLW-TPP.

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