Subscriber access provided by - Access paid by the | UCSB Libraries
Article
Carbon Capture and Utilization in the Industrial Sector Pete Psarras, Stephen Comello, Praveen Bains, Panunya Charoensawadpong, Stefan Reichelstein, and Jennifer Wilcox Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b01723 • Publication Date (Web): 31 Aug 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 3, 2017
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 27
1
Environmental Science & Technology
Carbon Capture and Utilization in the Industrial Sector
2 3 4
Peter C. Psarras,1 Stephen Comello,2 Praveen Bains3, Panunya Charoensawadpong3, Stefan Reichelstein2, and Jennifer Wilcox1*
5 6 7 8 9
1
Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Colorado School of Mines.
2
Graduate School of Business, Stanford University.
3
Department of Energy Resources Engineering, Stanford University.
*Correspondence to:
[email protected] 10 11
Abstract: The fabrication and manufacturing of industrial commodities such as iron, glass and
12
cement is carbon-intensive. A major reason capture of carbon dioxide from flue gases of
13
industrial processes has not been widely adopted as a climate mitigation strategy is due to the
14
lack of economic incentives for capturing CO2 on a scale that will impact climate. Yet,
15
abatement opportunities do exist for the industrial sector, provided the scale of such processes is
16
aligned well with CO2 utilization. This is important given that this sector accounts for 23% of
17
total global emissions. This work develops a model that examines the full cost of separating,
18
compressing and transporting CO2 of various industrial processes (sources), and pairing them
19
with appropriate utilization opportunities (sinks). We find that – given the relatively higher
20
concentrations of CO2 in flue gases from industrial processes – the full cost of abatement is
21
lower than that of the power sector. Further, we find truck transportation is generally the low-
22
cost alternative compared to pipeline transport for small volumes indicative of this kind of
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
23
capture activity (100 kt CO2/a). We apply this methodology to a regional case study, which
24
shows steel and cement manufacturing as having the lowest levelized cost of abatement.
25 26
Introduction: The capture of CO2 from flue gases is viewed as one potential instrument to
27
reduce global CO2 emissions. In terms of research, development and deployment, most of the
28
existing work on carbon capture has focused on fossil-fuel based power generation (coal and
29
natural gas). Yet abatement from industrial emissions has been largely overlooked, ignoring a
30
substantial source of carbon dioxide. In 2013, the global industrial sector emitted approximately
31
5.5 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide (Gt CO2), or 23% of total global CO2 emissions1 (see Figure S1
32
for US breakdown)2. These emissions are the by-product of the production of commodities such
33
as glass, cement, ammonia and steel – materials that form the essential fabric of the modern
34
economy (2). To date, these commodities have few viable substitutes. Further, unlike the
35
electricity sector, where mitigation can be achieved through a shift to cleaner, low-carbon energy
36
sources such as wind or solar, there are no economic pathways that lead to zero CO2 emissions
37
for most industrial commodity manufacturing. While overall production from such Essential
38
Industrial Processes (EIPs) has declined in the US, it is projected to increase globally 45-60% by
39
2050 to meet the demands of a rising global population and economic activity 3. We identify the
40
following processes (products) as EIPs: aluminum, ammonia synthesis, mixed carbonate use,
41
cement, biofuels (e.g., ethanol), ferroalloys, glass, iron and steel, lead, lime, magnesium,
42
petrochemicals, phosphoric acid, pulp and paper, refining, silicon carbide manufacturing, soda
43
ash production, titanium oxide, and zinc smelting (Figure 1).
44
Industrial processes often yield exhaust streams containing higher CO2 content than the
45
flue exhausts from fossil-fuel fired electricity production (e.g. coal and natural gas). It is
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 27
Page 3 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
46
generally accepted that there is an inverse relationship between cost of CO2 separation and initial
47
dilution of a mixed feed stream
48
may offer more economical abatement than what is projected in similar applications within the
49
power sector.
4, 5
. As a consequence, carbon capture from industrial processes
50
To assess the economic potential of carbon capture applied to EIPs, this study provides a
51
cost analysis that aggregates the three major components of the carbon capture supply chain:
52
separation, compression, and transport. We estimate the full economic cost, referred to as the
53
levelized cost of CO2 separation (in dollars per tonne of CO2 captured). We then employ a geo-
54
referencing approach, which links industrial sources to current and potential future CO2 sinks
55
(utilization opportunities), to identify least cost pathways for abatement, given a local mix of
56
supply and demand 6. The aim is to classify these EIPs based on carbon-capture economic
57
viability for carbon capture, which is ultimately a combination of industry- and site-specific
58
factors. Overall, our study identifies opportunities for CO2 emission reductions from industrial
59
sources. The availability of low cost capture opportunities in a particular region may lead to an
60
expanded CO2 commodity market, potentially displacing carbon dioxide production from natural
61
reservoirs and/or specialty chemical manufacturing facilities. This replacement would have the
62
effect of reducing overall CO2 emissions from an overall economy perspective7. Because prices
63
from current CO2 sources such as natural reservoirs and select industrial facilities are low
64
($7/tCO2 – $25/CO2)8 public policy in the form of carbon regulations and/or pricing may
65
ultimately have to play a supportive role in enabling the kind of market we examine in this study.
66 67 68
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 4 of 27
69
Methods
70
Estimating the levelized Cost of CO2 Capture for Utilization: We calculate the full economic
71
cost of carbon dioxide capture for utilization by using the general levelized product cost concept
72
introduced in Ref.
73
per tonne of CO2 of separating/capturing, compressing and transporting CO2. Our model does
74
not include storage costs, because our end route is CO2 utilization, not geologic storage. This
75
cradle-to-gate approach assigns all costs associated with utilization (e.g., further sweetening for
76
use as a feedstock or injection in the case of EOR) to the sink operator. The LCO2 metric
77
considers all fixed, variable and capacity related costs, in addition to discount rates and the effect
78
of corporate income taxes, that must be incurred in order to deliver one tonne of purified CO2.
79
The LCO2 concept is modular by construction and thus can be calculated for each element the
80
carbon dioxide value chain (separation, compression and transport). The LCO2 is essentially a
81
break-even metric, that is, the average price that would need to be received per tonne of CO2
82
over the lifetime of a facility to achieve a net present value of zero on the initial investment in
83
equipment and facilities. The three components of the levelized cost of CO2 capture and
84
utilization are represented formally as:
7, 9
. Specifically, we refer to LCO2 as the levelized cost, measured in dollars
85 86
= + + 87 88
where:
89
•
LCS is the levelized cost of CO2 separation from flue gas [$/tCO2]
90
•
LCC is the levelized cost of CO2 compression [$/tCO2]
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Eq. 1
Page 5 of 27
91
Environmental Science & Technology
•
LCT is the levelized cost of CO2 transportation [$/tCO2]
92
Generally, the cost of separation represents 60-80% of the total LCO2, with the cost of
93
transportation being the most variable component based on the distance between source and sink.
94
We now describe the calculation of each of these cost components.
95 96
Levelized Cost of CO2 Separation: An inventory of the reactions for each EIP is provided in
97
Table 1. These industrial processes can produce exhaust streams with higher CO2 content than
98
power generation (typically 4-35% concentration), a factor that lends to a lower theoretical
99
minimum work of separation
10
(see Supplemental Information). Though the ratio of minimum
100
work to real work (embodied in the second-law efficiency) scales non-linearly with dilution, CO2
101
separation costs are generally found to be inversely related to the CO2 purity of the treated
102
stream. This principle was first illustrated in the works of Thomas Sherwood, whereby the
103
market price of various minerals were shown to scale inversely with concentration of that
104
mineral11. Naturally, a single-parameter model is blind to several distinguishing process
105
characteristics, such as separation technology or stream impurities. However, in a CO2 separation
106
process, the balance of energy consumption (and thus cost) resides in the first steps of physical
107
separation and – when applicable – regeneration of the separating agent. For these first-step
108
dominant processes, energy and cost is shown to be most sensitive to target dilution, hence the
109
effectiveness of the single-parameter Sherwood approach, and its continued use in cost
110
modeling.4, 12-14 We expand upon this principle to build a cost model based on current capture
111
costs and conditions. Given cost estimates for CO2 capture technologies from power generation,
112
we use the Integrated Environmental Control Module (IECM)
113
Specifically, the IECM provides estimates for the facility and operating costs (including fuel
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
15
to calibrate the model.
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 6 of 27
114
costs) of electricity generation and carbon dioxide capture equipment for natural gas combined
115
cycle (NGCC), sub-critical pulverized coal (PC) and integrated gasification combined cycle
116
(IGCC) systems of various capacities (net power outputs), capture efficiencies and flow rates.
117
Based on the methodology described and data provided in the Supplementary Information, these
118
model output costs are used to determine the levelized cost of separation, LCS, for each
119
combination of generation technology, peak capacity, capture efficiency and flow rate. In this
120
study, 24 estimates of LCS (and LCC, discussed in the following page) were generated, based on
121
the 3 generation technologies (NGCC, PC, IGCC), 2 capacities each (large and small) and 4
122
capture rate (90%, 80%, 70%, 60%). These estimates became the basis for a cost equation using
123
a multivariate regression, with LCS as the independent variable and capture rate (%), flue CO2
124
concentration (%) and flow rate (tonnes/day) as the dependent variables (see also Supplementary
125
Information). The resulting linear estimation yields:
126
= 80.94 − 0.25 − 80.63 − 0.0006
Eq. 2
127 128
This relationship is applied to each EIP to estimate LCS, assuming a 90% capture rate. These
129
results, together with typical EIP conditions, are summarized in Table 2 and span a range of $0
130
per tCO2 (for pure stream capture) to $70 per tCO2. While the cost of separation shows a clear
131
inverse relationship with concentration, flow rate plays a smaller role as industrial flow rates are
132
comparable in scale and cost of separation is less sensitive to variations in flow rate as CO2
133
concentration increases (Figure 2). Note that literature costs of capture may deviate from
134
calculated estimates based on differing assumptions regarding cost of capacity, operational costs
135
(including fuel and electricity) and operational conditions. Analysis of model sensitivity to
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 7 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
136
several factors has been conducted and is presented in SI. Moreover, Sherwood estimates align
137
with processes with relatively low energy penalty and should be considered a lower bound in
138
instances that deviate from this system design.
139
calcium looping – shown to integrate well in cement facilities – against PCC MEA capture.17, 18
16
As an example, compare oxyfiring with
140 141 142
TABLE 1. Chemistry and scale of US essential industrial processes.a CO2 (Mt/a) Chemistry Process Combinedb 2.79 3.33 2Al O" + 3C → 4Al + 3CO 14.67 24.40 0.88CH& + 1.26air + 1.24H O → 0.88CO + N + 3H 0.48 1.48 Ca/MgCO" + heat → Ca/MgO + CO 65.79 68.22 CaCO" + heat → CaO + CO 40.80 40.80 C3 H4 O3 + yeast → 2C H7 OH + 2CO + heat 2.09 2.13 Fe O" + 2SiO + 7C → 2FeSi + 7CO Fe O" + 2MnO + 5C → 2FeMn + 5CO Fe O" + 2CrO + 5C → 2FeCr + 5CO Glass 1.18 5.34 various components + heat → CO + glass Iron and Steel 2C + O → 2CO 30.71 83.03 3CO + Fe O" → 2Fe + 3CO Lead 0.75 1.06 2PbO + C → 2Pb + CO 18.94 38.37 Lime CaCO" + heat → CaO + CO Magnesium 0.71 0.71 2MgO + C → 2Mg + CO 15.73 80.14 Petrochem. C H& + 3O → 2H O + 2CO H3PO4 1.72 2.72 CaCO" + H SO& + H O → CaSO& ∙ 2H O + CO 121.96 143.33 Pulp and Paper wood organics + O → CO ; CaCO" + heat → CaO + CO 69.34 188.05 Refining CH4."" OG.&" + 0.26O → 0.65CH4.4 + 0.27H O + 0.34CO SiC 0.12 0.12 SiO + 3C → SiC + 2CO Soda Ash 1.40 5.44 2Na CO" ∙ NaHCO" ∙ 2H O → 3Na CO" + 5H O + CO TiO2 1.44 2.47 2FeTiO" + 7Cl + 3C → 2TiCl& + 2FeCl" + 3CO Zinc 0.63 0.69 ZnO + CO → Zn + CO Total 391.25 691.84 a Source: EPA Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program, 2014 Commodity Aluminum Ammonia Carbonates Cement Ethanol Ferroalloys
b
Combined emissions = process + stationary combustion
143 144
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 8 of 27
145
Levelized Cost of CO2 Compression: The IECM also provides estimates for the equipment and
146
operating costs required to compress separated CO2. It is understood that the CO2 product is H2O
147
saturated and compression costs include dehydration. To calculate the LCC as a function of
148
capture efficiency and flow rate (similar to the calculation of LCS), the procedure for NGCC, PC
149
and IGCC outlined above is repeated, however this time with compression equipment present.
150
The capacity and operational costs calculated for separation are subtracted from the
151
corresponding values that include both separation and compression costs. Using the total mass of
152
CO2 separated for each calibrating case, we determine the LCC. Finally, in the same approach
153
using a multivariate regression the resulting relationship to each EIP, the levelized cost of
154
compression is determined. Results show a range between approximately $4 per tCO2 and $10
155
per tCO2.
156 157
TABLE 2. Minimum work and Sherwood-derived separation/capture cost estimations for various industries. Source Aluminum Ammonia Carbonates Cement Ethanol (biofuels) Ferroalloys Glass Iron and Steel
Lead Lime Magnesium Petrochemicals Pulp and Paper
CO2 Content (mol %)a
Ref.
Min. Work Estimated Cost (US$/tCO2 (kJ/mol CO2 Captured) b Captured)
4 – 10 6, 19, 20 8.2 – 10.8 30 – 99.9+ 22 0.0 – 5.0 20 24 6.2 14 – 33 25, 26 4.7 – 7.3
45.8 – 65.6 0.0f – 29.0 36.0 28.1 – 39.2
99.9+ 8 – 10 7 – 12 20 – 27
29 31-33 31, 34 25, 35
0.0 8.3 – 8.9 7.7 – 9.3 5.5 – 6.2
0.0f 46.3 – 50.6 44.4 – 54.9 31.4 – 34.2
15 20 15 30 – 99.9+ 8
38 31 31, 39 35, 40 41
7.1 6.2 7.1 0.0 – 5.0 8.9
40.5 34.4 40.7 0.0f – 28.6 48.0
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Literature Estimates (2016 US$/t CO2 Captured) 68.2c,d – 76.3c,e 21.2c,g 57.3c,g, 68.4c,g, 54.8h – 95.3i, 12.7j
Ref. 21 23 23, 27, 28 30
21.7k – 24.4k, 23, 36, 37 32.6l – 44.0l, 57.3c,g
31.1m – 35.0m 61.7n
42-43
Page 9 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
Refining
3 – 20
44, 45
6.2 – 11.7
33.5 – 70.4
Silicon Carbide Soda Ash TiO2 Zinc Natural Gas Petroleum Coal
8 36 – 40 13 15 3–5 3–8 10 – 15
48 49 50 38 10, 40 10, 25 40, 52, 53
8.9 4.0 – 4.4 7.5 7.1 10.3 – 11.7 8.9 – 11.7 7.1– 8.3
51.4 25.6 – 26.7 41.2 40.2 57.2 – 69.9 47.0 – 69.0 36.5 – 42.7
a
44.8o, 57.0p 92.8q
45-47
76.3r
51
37.1 – 54.6s
54
Range in composition due to different processes or different capture points within the same process. When not directly reported, values were
estimated from a complete mass balance assuming NG fuel and 15% excess air; b calculated assuming 99.5% purity and 90% capture, Ref. 10; c includes cost of compression; d calculated at 10% CO2 purity; e calculated at 4% CO2 purity; f for near pure streams, separation costs are considered in the compression and dehydration stage; g includes costs for transport and storage; h oxycombustion; i post-combustion MEA; j includes compression and dehydration; k selexol capture from the blast furnace; l post-combustion capture from blast furnace; m capture using precombustion shift technology; n amine capture from boiler; o PCC from gasifier exhaust; p SMR with CCS, cost avoided; q PCC on combined stack (9% CO2), cost avoided; r MEA PCC, 90% efficiency, cost avoided; s PCC from supercritical pulverized coal, includes compression.
158 159 160
Levelized Cost of CO2 Transportation: Generally, there are two methods of transport: pipeline
161
and tanker delivery (trucking). Transport via rail could be viable if the source and sink were
162
located proximal to railheads, though economics rarely prove favorable over short distances (
6250
Sink Demand (kt CO2 ) 500 250 0.0
Figure 1. National distribution of essential industrial processes. Graduated symbols denote potential CO2 capture volume (at 90% capture rate).
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 20 of 27
Figure 2. Prediction of capture costs from power (black circles) of varying gas flow rates (low to high). This data is used to predict levelized costs of capture for several irreplaceable industries (colored circles and diamonds). Not shown are cost points for streams of 99.9+% CO2 purity, for which the cost of capture is assumed to approach zero.
CO2 Sinks Plastics/Polymers Manufacturing Fire Proo ng Refrigeration Industrial Gas Manufacturing Beverage Carbonation Enhanced Oil Recovery Soda Bicarbonate Manufacturing Urea Manufacturing Gum and Wood Chemicals
Sink Demand (kt CO2 per year) < 150 150.01 – 600 600.01 – 1200 >1200
Source Output (kt CO2 ) 15,000 5,000 0.0
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 21 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 3. National distribution of CO2 utilization opportunities. Graduated symbols denote CO2 demand. Enhanced oil recovery dominates demand but is geographically isolated from industrial emitters in the Northeast and West coast, where smaller scale opportunities may play a more prominent role. 369
Figure 4. LCO2 and relative quantity delivered to sinks, PA case study. 370 371 372
References:
373
1.
374
Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; [Core Writing Team, R.K. Pachauri and
375
L.A. Meyer (eds.)]. IPCC, Geneva, Switzerland, , 2014; p 25.
376
2.
377
Emissions. Accessed January 16, 2016; 2015.
378
3.
379
http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/sres/emission/index.php?idp=99 Accessed September 2, 2015; 2015.
IPCC Climate Change 2014: Synthesis Report. Contribution of Working Groups I, II and III to the Fifth
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; (EPA) US GHG Inventory Chapter 2: Trends in Greenhouse Gas
Intergovermental Panel on Climate Change; (IPCC) Emissions Scenarios. Available at
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
380
4.
House, K. Z.; Baclig, A. C.; Ranjan, M.; van Nierop, E. A.; Wilcox, J.; Herzog, H. J., Economic and
381
energetic analysis of capturing CO2 from ambient air. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2011, 108,
382
(51), 20428-20433.
383
5.
Grübler, A., Technology and global change. Cambridge University Press: 2003.
384
6.
Solomon, S., Climate change 2007-the physical science basis: Working group I contribution to the fourth
385
assessment report of the IPCC. Cambridge University Press: 2007; Vol. 4.
386
7.
387
2014, 74, 579-588.
388
8.
Denbury Resources 2016 Annual Report; Plano, TX, 2016.
389
9.
Reichelstein, S.; Rohlfing-Bastian, A., Levelized Product Cost: Concept and Decision Relevance. The
390
Accounting Review 2014, 90, (4), 1653-1682.
391
10.
Wilcox, J., Carbon capture. Springer: New York, 2012.
392
11.
Sherwood, T. K., Mass Transfer Between Phases. Phi Lambda Upsilon, Penn State University, University
393
Park, PA: 1959.
394
12.
395
Technoeconomic Benchmarks in the Electroreduction of CO2. ChemSusChem 2016, 9, (15), 1972-1979.
396
13.
397
Design and Synthesis of Sustainable Integrated Biorefinery for Pharmaceutical Products from Palm-Based Biomass.
398
Process Integration and Optimization for Sustainability 2017, 1, (2), 135-151.
399
14.
400
Recycling. Environmental Science & Technology 2007, 41, (21), 7543-7550.
401
15.
402
storage. Energy policy 2007, 35, (9), 4444-4454.
403
16.
404
systematic review of carbon capture and storage (CCS) applied to the iron and steel, cement, oil refining and pulp
405
and paper industries, as well as other high purity sources. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control 2017, 61, 71-84.
406
17.
407
Systems and Policies 2012, (2012), 17.
Comello, S.; Reichelstein, S., Incentives for early adoption of carbon capture technology. Energy Policy
Verma, S.; Kim, B.; Jhong, H. R.; Ma, S.; Kenis, P. J. A., A Gross‐Margin Model for Defining
Ng, S. Y.; Ong, S. Y.; Ng, Y. Y.; Liew, A. H. B.; Ng, D. K. S.; Chemmangattuvalappil, N. G., Optimal
Dahmus, J. B.; Gutowski, T. G., What Gets Recycled: An Information Theory Based Model for Product
Rubin, E. S.; Chen, C.; Rao, A. B., Cost and performance of fossil fuel power plants with CO2 capture and
Leeson, D.; Mac Dowell, N.; Shah, N.; Petit, C.; Fennell, P. S., A Techno-economic analysis and
Fennell, P. S.; Florin, N.; Napp, T.; Hills, T., CCS from industrial sources. Sustainable Technologies,
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 22 of 27
Page 23 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
408
18.
Dean, C.; Hills, T.; Florin, N.; Dugwell, D.; Fennell, P. S., Integrating calcium looping CO2 capture with
409
the manufacture of cement. Energy Procedia 2013, 37, 7078-7090.
410
19.
411
Aluminum Industries in the UAE: An Empirical Analysis. Energy Procedia 2013, 37, 7732-7740.
412
20.
413
http://www.phinix.net/services/Energy_Management/Improving_Energy_Efficiency.pdf. Accessed October 14,
414
2015. 2007.
415
21.
416
Capture from Aluminium Production. Energy Procedia 2014, 51, 184-190.
417
22.
418
(UK) Ltd.; 2010.
419
23.
420
Global CCS Institute. Canberra, Australia: Global CCS Institute 2011.
421
24.
422
Product Use. Accessed January 16, 2016; 2015.
423
25.
424
of isolated adsorbed atoms. Surf. Sci. 1973, 36, (1), 317-352.
425
26.
426
industry. Tannenstrasse: European Cement Research Academy 2007, 96.
427
27.
428
from a cement plant–technical possibilities and economical estimates, 2006, pp 19-22.
429
28.
430
Industry. Energy Procedia 2009, 1, (1), 87-94.
431
29.
432
45, (5), 28-29.
433
30.
Levina, E.; Bennett, S.; McCoy, S., Technology roadmap: carbon capture and storage. OECD/IEA: 2013.
434
31.
Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change; (IPCC), 2006 IPCC guidelines for national greenhouse gas
435
inventories. 2006.
Tsai, I. T.; Al Ali, M.; El Waddi, S.; Zarzour, O. A., Carbon Capture Regulation for The Steel and
Das, S. K., Improving Energy Efficiency in Aluminum Melting. Available at
Mathisen, A.; Sørensen, H.; Eldrup, N.; Skagestad, R.; Melaaen, M.; Müller, G. I., Cost Optimised CO2
Zakkour, P., Cook, G. CCS Roadmap for Industry: High-Purity CO2 Sources. Carbon Counts Company
Parsons, W., Economic assessment of carbon capture and storage technologies: 2011 update. Report for the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; (EPA) US GHG Inventory Chapter 4: Industrial Processes and
Steele, W. A., The physical interaction of gases with crystalline solids: I. Gas-solid energies and properties
Hoenig, V.; Hoppe, H.; Emberger, B., Carbon capture technology-options and potentials for the cement
Hegerland, G.; Pande, J. O.; Haugen, H. A.; Eldrup, N.; Tokheim, L. A.; Hatlevik, L. M. In Capture of CO2
Barker, D. J.; Turner, S. A.; Napier-Moore, P. A.; Clark, M.; Davison, J. E., CO2 Capture in the Cement
Rushing, S. A., Merchant Carbon Dioxide Sourcing: The Ethanol Perspective. CryoGas International 2007,
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
436
32.
Holappa, L., Towards sustainability in ferroalloy production. South African Institute of Mining and
437
Metallurgy. Journal 2010, 110, (12), 703-710.
438
33.
439
International Ferroalloys Congress. 2013.
440
34.
441
steady-state computation fluid dynamics. Appl. Therm. Eng. 2013, 52, (2), 555-565.
442
35.
443
Change 1995, 29, (4), 439-461.
444
36.
Gielen, D., CO2 removal in the iron and steel industry. Energy Convers. Manage. 2003, 44, (7), 1027-1037.
445
37.
IEA CO2 capture and storage: a key carbon abatement option; Paris, France: International Energy Agency,
446
2008.
447
38.
448
(1), 30-40.
449
39.
450
Emissions from Chinese Magnesium Production. Environmental Science & Technology 2015, 49, (21), 12662-
451
12669.
452
40.
453
Technol. 2010, 101, (10), 3311-3319.
454
41.
455
https://www.iea.org/publications/freepublications/publication/tracking_emissions.pdf 2007.
456
42.
457
assessment. Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 2006, 11, (5-6), 1129-1150.
458
43.
459
Tobin, D.; Gilmartin, J. J.; Steffensen, E. J., Overcoming business model uncertainty in a carbon dioxide capture and
460
sequestration project: Case study at the Boise White Paper Mill. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control 2012, 9, 91-102.
461
44.
462
D., Application of Advanced Technologies for CO2 Capture From Industrial Sources. Energy Procedia 2013, 37,
463
7176-7185.
Ladam, Y.; Tangstad, M.; Ravary, B., Energy Mapping of Industrial Ferroalloy Plants. The thirteenth
Díaz-Ibarra, O.; Abad, P.; Molina, A., Design of a day tank glass furnace using a transient model and
Farla, J. C. M.; Hendriks, C. A.; Blok, K., Carbon dioxide recovery from industrial processes. Climatic
Wu, J. C. S., Photocatalytic reduction of greenhouse gas CO2 to fuel. Catalysis surveys from Asia 2009, 13,
Gao, F.; Liu, Y.; Nie, Z.-R.; Gong, X.; Wang, Z., Variation Trend and Driving Factors of Greenhouse Gas
Xu, Y.; Isom, L.; Hanna, M. A., Adding value to carbon dioxide from ethanol fermentations. Bioresour.
International Energy Agency; (IEA), Tracking Industrial Energy Efficiency and CO2 Emissions.
Möllersten, K.; Gao, L.; Yan, J., CO2 capture in pulp and paper mills: CO2 balances and preliminary cost
McGrail, B. P.; Freeman, C. J.; Brown, C. F.; Sullivan, E. C.; White, S. K.; Reddy, S.; Garber, R. D.;
Romano, M. C.; Anantharaman, R.; Arasto, A.; Ozcan, D. C.; Ahn, H.; Dijkstra, J. W.; Carbo, M.; Boavida,
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 24 of 27
Page 25 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
464
45.
van Straelen, J.; Geuzebroek, F.; Goodchild, N.; Protopapas, G.; Mahony, L., CO2 capture for refineries, a
465
practical approach. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control 2010, 4, (2), 316-320.
466
46.
467
in Australia. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control 2011, 5, (1), 49-60.
468
47.
469
Greenhouse Gas Emissions at North American Refineries. Environmental Science & Technology 2017, 51, (3),
470
1918-1928.
471
48.
472
CO2 and water vapor to hydrocarbon fuels. Nano Lett. 2009, 9, (2), 731-737.
473
49.
474
carbon dioxide to hydrocarbons. Acs Nano 2010, 4, (3), 1259-1278.
475
50.
476
fluidized bed chlorination for preparation of TiCl 4. Transactions of Nonferrous Metals Society of China 2010, 20,
477
(1), 128-134.
478
51.
479
Plants. Environmental Science & Technology 2012, 46, (6), 3076-3084.
480
52.
481
Publishing House: 2007.
482
53.
483
opportunity for membranes. Journal of Membrane Science 2010, 359, (1), 126-139.
484
54.
485
Control 2015, 40, 378-400.
486
55.
Metz, B.; Davidson, O.; de Coninck, H.; Loos, M.; Meyer, L., Carbon dioxide capture and storage. 2005.
487
56.
Hasan, M. M. F.; Boukouvala, F.; First, E. L.; Floudas, C. A., Nationwide, regional, and statewide CO2
488
capture, utilization, and sequestration supply chain network optimization. Industrial & Engineering Chemistry
489
Research 2014, 53, (18), 7489-7506.
Ho, M. T.; Allinson, G. W.; Wiley, D. E., Comparison of MEA capture cost for low CO2 emissions sources
Motazedi, K.; Abella, J. P.; Bergerson, J. A., Techno–Economic Evaluation of Technologies to Mitigate
Varghese, O. K.; Paulose, M.; LaTempa, T. J.; Grimes, C. A., High-rate solar photocatalytic conversion of
Roy, S. C.; Varghese, O. K.; Paulose, M.; Grimes, C. A., Toward solar fuels: photocatalytic conversion of
Xiong, S.-F.; Yuan, Z.-F.; Cong, X. U.; Liang, X. I., Composition of off-gas produced by combined
Rubin, E. S.; Zhai, H., The Cost of Carbon Capture and Storage for Natural Gas Combined Cycle Power
Elanchezhian, C.; Saravanakumar, L.; Ramnath, B. V., Power Plant Engineering. I.K. International
Merkel, T. C.; Lin, H.; Wei, X.; Baker, R., Power plant post-combustion carbon dioxide capture: an
Rubin, E. S.; Davison, J. E.; Herzog, H. J., The cost of CO2 capture and storage. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
490
57.
Knoope, M. M. J.; Guijt, W.; Ramírez, A.; Faaij, A. P. C., Improved cost models for optimizing CO2
491
pipeline configuration for point-to-point pipelines and simple networks. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control 2014, 22,
492
25-46.
493
58.
494
Consortium 2003.
495
59.
496
Available at http://www3.epa.gov/climatechange/ccs/. Accessed 11/1/2015; 2011.
497
60.
498
of carbon dioxide. Energy & Environmental Science 2010, 3, (1), 43-81.
499
61.
500
capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) to enhanced oil recovery. Center for Climate and Energy Solutions 2012.
501
62.
502
https://www.globalccsinstitute.com/sites/www.globalccsinstitute.com/files/publications/14026/accelerating-uptake-
503
ccs-industrial-use-captured-carbon-dioxide.pdf 2011.
504
63.
505
Journal of Supercritical Fluids 2004, 28, (2), 121-191.
506
64.
507
1998, 75, (12), 1641.
508
65.
509
2365-2387.
510
66.
511
Operations. In 2012.
512
67.
513
Flooding Conference. In (2013).
514
68.
515
Bituminous Coal (PC) and Natural Gas to Electricity Revision 3; 2015.
Berwick, M. D.; Farooq, M., Truck costing model for transportation managers. Mountain-Plains
United States Environmental Protection Agency; (EPA) Carbon Dioxide Capture and Sequestration,
Mikkelsen, M.; Jorgensen, M.; Krebs, F. C., The teraton challenge. A review of fixation and transformation
Melzer, L. S., Carbon dioxide enhanced oil recovery (CO2 EOR): Factors involved in adding carbon
Brinckerhoff, P., Accelerating the uptake of CCS: industrial use of captured carbon dioxide.
Beckman, E. J., Supercritical and near-critical CO2 in green chemical synthesis and processing. The
Wai, C. M.; Hunt, F.; Ji, M.; Chen, X., Chemical reactions in supercritical carbon dioxide. J. Chem. Educ.
Sakakura, T.; Choi, J.-C.; Yasuda, H., Transformation of Carbon Dioxide. Chem. Rev. 2007, 107, (6),
DiPietro, P.; Balash, P.; Wallace, M., A Note on Sources of CO2 Supply for Enhanced-Oil-Recovery
DiPietro, P., Murrell, G, North American CO2 Supply and Developments. presented at the 19th Annual CO2
Fout, T.; Gerdes, K.; Shultz, T. Cost and Performance Baseline for Fossil Energy Plants Volume 1a:
516
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 26 of 27
Page 27 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
517 518
TOC Image.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment