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Toward Efficient CO2 Capture Solvent Design by Analyzing the Effect of Chain Lengths and Amino Types to the Absorption Capacity, Bicarbonate/Carbamate and Cyclic Capacity Rui Zhang, Qi Yang, ZhiWu Liang, Graeme Puxty, Roger J. Mulder, Joanna E. Cosgriff, Hai Yu, Xin Yang, and Ying Xue Energy Fuels, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.7b01951 • Publication Date (Web): 14 Sep 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 18, 2017
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Energy & Fuels
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Toward Efficient CO2 Capture Solvent Design by Analyzing
2
the Effect of Chain Lengths and Amino Types to the
3
Absorption Capacity, Bicarbonate/Carbamate and Cyclic
4
Capacity
5 6
Rui Zhang1, Qi Yang2*, Zhiwu Liang1*, Graeme Puxty3, Roger J. Mulder2, Joanna E.
7
Cosgriff2, Hai Yu3, Xin Yang4, Ying Xue4
8 9 1
10
Joint International Center for CO2 Capture and Storage (iCCS), Provincial Key
11
Laboratory for Cost-effective Utilization of Fossil Fuel Aimed at Reducing
12
Carbon-dioxide Emissions, College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Hunan
13
University, Changsha, Hunan, 410082, P.R. China 2
14
3
15 16 17
CSIRO Manufacturing, Clayton Victoria 3168, Australia
4
CSIRO Energy, Newcastle NSW 2300, Australia
College of Chemistry, Key Lab of Green Chemistry and Technology in Ministry of Education, Sichuan University, Chengdu, Sichuan, 610064, P.R. China
18 19
*CORRESPONDING AUTHORS:
20
1. Dr. Zhiwu Liang
21
Tel.: +86-13618481627; fax: +86-731-88573033;
22
E-mail address:
[email protected] 23
2. Dr. Qi Yang
24
Tel.: +61-395452574
25
Email address:
[email protected] 26 1
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Highlights:
28
•
This work provided a guide for designing novel efficient CO2 absorbent.
29
•
The relationship of structure-efficiency for CO2 capture was developed.
30
•
The carbamate stability of carbamate were studied using quantum chemistry.
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ABSTRACT
32 33
Chemical absorption using aqueous amine-based solutions is the leading method
34
for large-scale CO2 capture in industrial plants. This technology, however, still faces
35
many challenges, in particular the high energy requirements for solvent regeneration,
36
which limit the economic viability of the technology. To guide the development of
37
more energy efficient amine solvents, this work studied the effect of molecular
38
characteristics of diamines, including carbon chain length and type of amino
39
functional group, on CO2 absorption and desorption performance. Six linear terminal
40
diamines (NH2CH2CH2-R, R = NH2, NHCH3, N(CH3)2, CH2NH2, CH2NHCH3 and
41
CH2N(NH3)2)
42
(NH2CH2CH2OH, MEA) and 3-aminopropanol (NH2CH2CH2CH2OH, 3AP), were
43
also tested as benchmarks. The CO2 absorption capacity in each amine was measured
44
at 40 °C under atmospheric pressure using different CO2 gas partial pressures. 13C and
45
1
were
investigated
and
two
monoamines,
monoethanolamine
H NMR spectroscopy were used to identify and quantify species present in the
46
CO2-amine-H2O system. Computational modelling was also carried out using
47
Gaussian software to explain the effect of chain length change on the stability of the
48
monocarbamate. The experimental results showed that the chain length extension
49
from C2 to C3 led to a higher CO2 absorption capacity and more bicarbonate formation
50
during the CO2 absorption process, and the computational study results supported this
51
conclusion. In addition, the experimental results also demonstrated that increasing the
52
substitution on one N atom in the tested diamines is favorable for a higher CO2
53
absorption capacity and more bicarbonate formation under a CO2 partial pressure of 3
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101 kPa. Both chain length extension from C2 to C3 and an increase in the number of
55
substituents on one N atom yield better performance in the CO2 desorption with
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regards to the CO2 higher cyclic capacity and faster initial CO2 release rate for the
57
tested amines.
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Keywords: Carbon dioxide, amine, CO2 capture, diamine
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1. INTRODUCTION
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Climate change has caused strong concern worldwide and excessive CO2
62
emission is considered to be the main contributor to global warming, therefore CO2
63
capture and storage has become an important research subject1-3. Normally, there are
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three major technologies to capture CO2 are post-combustion, pre-combustion, and
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oxy-fuel combustion CO2 capture4. The post-combustion technology for CO2
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separation is performed from the flue gas after the fuels completely burned5. The
67
integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) system is used for the pre-combustion
68
technology for separating CO2 from mixture gas, this process can be briefly described
69
as follows; the coal gasification generates a mixture of CO and H2 which is then
70
reformed as CO2 and H2 by steam, the CO2 is removed before H2 is combusted in the
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combustion chamber of the gas turbine5. In oxy-fuel combustion, coal is burned at the
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high concentration of oxygen condition to produce flue gas with high CO2
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concentration which is almost ready for utilization and/or storage5. Huang et al.
74
briefly reviewed the existing method and developing technology of CO2 utilization6.
75
The conversion of CO2 into chemical products by using the metal-organic frameworks
76
(MOFs) still faces many challenges such as rigorous reaction conditions, high energy
77
consumption and materials costs7.
78
Among different CO2 capture methods, post-combustion capture using chemical
79
absorbents, especially amine absorbents, is regarded as a feasible method for
80
mitigating the CO2 emissions from many industrial sources8-11. The most commonly
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studied amine absorbent is monoethanolamine (MEA)12-16. Aqueous solutions of other 5
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primary, secondary and tertiary amines and amino acid salts have also been studied to
83
investigate their mass transfer performance, reaction kinetics and energy consumption
84
in
85
demonstrated some challenges for use in CO2 capture processes. For example,
86
primary amines such as MEA have a fast reaction rate with CO2 during absorption but
87
require large energy consumption during CO2 desorption; a tertiary amine such as
88
N-methyldiethanolamine (MDEA) requires less energy for CO2 desorption but has a
89
slow reaction rate with CO2 during absorption. Other challenges for CO2 capture
90
processes include amine degradation, facility corrosion, and the escape of amine or
91
other substances to the environment14, 22-24. These challenges, in particular high energy
92
consumption, result in high CO2 capture costs
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important to develop better solvents and better processes.
absorption-desorption
processes17-21.
All
of
25
these
absorbents,
however,
. To address these challenges, it is
94
An ideal amine absorbent for CO2 capture should have fast reaction kinetics
95
during CO2 absorption, large CO2 cyclic capacity (the difference between rich amine
96
CO2 loading and lean amine CO2 loading), and low energy consumption during
97
desorption. The performance of amines during CO2 absorption and stripping is
98
strongly related to amine molecular structure. To design and develop better amine
99
absorbents for CO2 capture, it is necessary to understand the effect of amine
100
molecular structure on amine performance in CO2 capture.
101
A molecule with multiple amino groups results in a higher CO2 absorption
102
capacity as more sites for reaction with CO2 are available 26. Yang et al. and Conway
103
et al., have studied a number of specifically designed amine absorbents for CO2 6
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capture
. These designer amines contained two or three amino groups of different
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types which were spaced by two or three carbons in the same molecules. Their results
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showed that the designer amines demonstrated a significant improvement in CO2
107
cyclic capacity. Despite these studies, no systematic investigation has been carried out
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to investigate the effects of molecular structure changes of diamines on CO2
109
absorption-desorption performance.
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In this work, six linear diamines with the structure NH2(CH2)n-R were
111
investigated for their absorption-desorption performance (n = 2 or 3; and R = NH2,
112
NHCH3, N(CH3)2). One terminal nitrogen was kept as a primary amino group and the
113
other varied among primary, secondary and tertiary amino groups. In addition to
114
chemical names and abbreviations, the diamines presented in this paper are also given
115
structural codes of mNCxNn (m, n = 1, 2 or 3, which represent the primary, secondary
116
and tertiary amino group respectively; and x = 2 or 3, which represents the chain
117
length with two or three carbons respectively) to emphasize their chemical structure
118
variations. In the current study, CO2 absorption capacity in each amine at the
119
concentration of 2 M for a diamine or 4 M for a monoamine was first measured at
120
40.0 °C under atmospheric pressure using different CO2 gas partial pressures. The
121
proportions of carbamate and bicarbonate/carbonate were determined by the peak
122
areas of their 13C and 1H NMR spectra. The total CO2 loading of each amine solution
123
was determined from the NMR spectroscopic results. The stripping experiments were
124
carried out to evaluate the CO2 removal performance of the amines tested with regards
125
to the CO2 cyclic capacity and initial CO2 release rate. The results were evaluated in 7
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terms of the effect of varying the carbon chain length and the types of amino groups.
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Computational modelling was also carried out for the pair of 1NC2N1 and 1NC3N1 and
128
the pair of 1NC2N2 and 1NC3N2 to improve understanding of the influence of the
129
structural changes on diamine speciation behaviour.
130 131
2. EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
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2.1 Materials and apparatus
133
MEA used was purchased from Merck, and six diamines (Table 1) and 3AP were
134
all from Sigma Aldrich. All the chemicals were used as purchased without further
135
purification. The details of these amines including their structure codes are shown in
136
Table 1. CO2 (>99.9%) and N2 gases (>99.999%) were purchased from BOC.
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Hydrogen (1H) and carbon (13C) NMR spectra were acquired at 25.0 °C on a
138
Bruker Avance III 400 NMR spectrometer operating at frequencies of 400.13 MHz
139
(1H) and 100.62 MHz (13C). The external chemical shift reference used in this study
140
consisted
141
3-(trimethysilyl)propinonate-2,2,3,3-d4 (TMSPd) (1%, w/v) in a mixture of
142
dioxane-D2O (50% v/v). The trimethylsilyl resonance of TMSPd was defined as 0
143
ppm for 1H NMR and the dioxane resonance as 66.83 ppm for
144
spectra were obtained as the sum of 32 scans with an interscan delay of 3.73 seconds.
145
Inverse-gated 1H-decoupled
146
(zgig30 pulse program, Bruker) as the sum of 32 scans with a minimum pulse delay
147
time (D1) of 70 to 90 seconds which corresponded to a value of (AQ + D1) ≥ 5 ×
of
a
capillary
13
containing
a
solution
of
sodium
13
C NMR. 1H NMR
C NMR spectra were obtained at a pulse angle of 30°
8
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T1max of the slowest relaxing carbon for each sample. The NMR data were processed
149
using Bruker TopSpin 3.5 software.
150
Bronkhorst flow-controllers were used to control gas flow rates in experiments.
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Table 1. The details of each amine used in this work.
152 Amine
Acronym
Code
Mol Wt
Purity (%)
MEA
1
NC2OH
61.08
99.0
3-Aminopropanol
3AP
1
NC3OH
75.11
99.0
Ethylenediamine
EDA
1
NC2N1
60.10
99.5
MEDA
1
NC2N2
74.13
95.0
2-Dimethylaminoethylamine
DMAEA
1
NC2N3
88.15
99.0
1,3-Propanediamine
1,3-PDA
1
NC3N1
74.13
99.0
N'-Methylpropane-1,3-diamine
MAPA
1
NC3N2
88.15
97.0
3-Dimethylaminopropylamine
DMAPA
1
NC3N3
102.18
99.0
Monoethanolamine
N-Methylethylenediamine
Molecular structure
153 154
2.2 Absorption and desorption experiments
155
2.2.1 CO2 absorption capacity measurement
156
The CO2 absorption capacity is the maximum CO2 loading at a specific
157
temperature and pressure. The absorption capacity of CO2 in aqueous amine solutions
158
under atmospheric pressure at two CO2 partial pressures (101 kPa and 10 kPa) were
159
measured using the CO2 absorption experimental apparatus (Fig. 1).
160
Amine solutions (2 M for all diamines and 4 M for all monoamines) were
161
prepared by dissolving the appropriate quantity of amine in deionized water in a 9
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volumetric flask. 50 mL of the freshly prepared amine solution was then placed in a
163
jacketed 100 mL pear-shaped flask topped with a cooling condenser (Fig. 1) and
164
thermometer. The solution was stirred with an egg-shaped magnetic stirring bar (900
165
rpm) and heated by the circulation of thermostatted water (40.0 °C) through the flask
166
jacket. The internal temperature of the absorption was maintained at 39.7 ± 0.1 °C.
167
Pure CO2 gas (101 kPa) was humidified by passage through a flask of water at room
168
temperature (25 ± 0.1 °C) and was then bubbled into the sample at a flow rate of 20
169
mL/min for 18 hours to ensure that the amine solutions were fully saturated with CO2.
170
The authors repeated the experiments 6 times using 2 different amines (one
171
monoamine and one diamine). The deviations of the volume change for the 6 runs are
172
-0.11, -0.10, -0.12, -0.14, -0.14 and -0.13 ml, respectively, and the AAD (absolute
173
average deviation) is 1.23% relative to the initial total volume, this is an acceptable
174
errors and that means the volume changes during the absorption process for 18 hours
175
can be neglected.
176
The fully CO2 loaded amine samples under a CO2 partial pressure of 10 kPa were
177
prepared as described above except that the gas composition was changed to 10% CO2
178
in N2 with a total flow rate of 50 mL/min (5 mL CO2/min, 45 mL N2/min) and the
179
amine sample volume reduced to 10 mL.
10
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Figure 1. The CO2 absorption-desorption experiment diagram. 2.2.2 Preparation of samples at different CO2 loadings
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The amine samples with different CO2 loadings were prepared by mixing the
184
above CO2-rich solution prepared using pure CO2 gas with the corresponding fresh
185
amine solution in a volume ratio of CO2-rich amine/total mixed amine (sum of
186
CO2-rich amine and fresh amine) of 0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9 and 1.0
187
respectively. These samples were equilibrated for 60 minutes, and then 0.5 mL of each
188
sample was placed in a 5 mm NMR tube for NMR analysis.
189
2.2.3 Desorption process
190
The stripping experiments were also carried out in the apparatus shown in Fig. 1.
191
The experiments started with the preparation of the CO2-rich amine solution using a
192
gas mixture of 10 kPa of CO2 partial pressure in N2 under an atmosphere pressure as
193
described above. After the solutions reached equilibrium, the water flow through the
194
water jacket was isolated and the gas inlet was replaced by a stopper. The amine
195
solution was sealed in the reaction flask and kept at room temperature. A sample was
196
taken for NMR analysis. The temperature of the water bath was increased to 90 °C.
197
Once this temperature was reached the reaction flask was re-equipped with the 11
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198
condenser and the solution was stirred, followed by recommencing the circulation of
199
the thermostatted water reservoir (now 90 °C) through the water jacket; desorption
200
time was recorded from this point. The desorption samples (0.5 mL) were taken from
201
the solution at 2, 5, 10, 20, 30, 45 and 60 min after the start of desorption and
202
transferred to NMR tubes. The samples were analyzed by
203
spectroscopy at 25 °C. The fully loaded amine samples (10 kPa CO2) and the
204
corresponding 60 minute desorption samples were used for the CO2 cyclic capacity
205
calculation.
206
2.3 Computational study of C2 and C3 diamines
13
C and 1H NMR
207
Geometry optimizations were performed at the M06-GD329/6-31+G(d,p) level in
208
water (the solvent used experimentally) solution using the SMD30, 31 solvation model
209
with the keyword “int=ultrafine”. Grimme’s recent studies32, 33 have suggested that it
210
is important to include empirical dispersion corrections with these regularly used
211
functionals. The vibrational frequency outcomes were examined at the same level of
212
theory to confirm stationary points as minima (no imaginary frequencies).
213
Single-point
214
M06-GD3/6-31+G(d,p)-optimized structures at the M06-GD3/6-311++G(2d,2p) level
215
with solvation effects modelled by SMD in water. The thermal corrections evaluated
216
from the unscaled vibrational frequencies at the M06-GD3/6-31+G(d,p) level on the
217
optimized geometries were then added to the (SMD)M06-GD3/6-311++G(2d,2p)
218
electronic energies to obtain the free energies. To obtain further insight into the
219
electronic properties of the present system, natural bond orbital (NBO)34 analyses
energy
calculations
were
carried
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all
the
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were performed at the M06-GD3/6-31+G(d,p) level in water solution with the SMD
221
model on selected systems. All calculations were performed with Gaussian 09.
222 223
3. THEORY
224
3.1 Chemistry
225
In terms of the expected chemical species at equilibrium the following chemical
226
reactions were assumed to occur in the diamine-CO2-H2O system studied in this work.
227
The symbol dAm is used in the following equations for both diamines and amino
228
groups to illustrate reactions occurring in the system.
229
Formation of monocarbamate by primary or secondary amino groups:
230
+ + ↔ +
231
Formation of dicarbamate:
232
+ + ↔ + ()
233
Hydrolysis of carbamate:
234
+ ↔ +
(3)
235
() + ↔ +
(4)
236
() + 2 ↔ 2 +
(5)
237
Formation of protonated amine:
238
+ ↔ +
239
+ ↔ + (for diamine)
(1)
(2)
(6)
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The monocarbamate or dicarbamate in eqs. (1) - (7) represent all possible
241
carbamate species in the formation and hydrolysis regardless of the amino-group type.
242
The amino-group type details are discussed with the relevant results.
243
3.2 Identification and quantification of species by 13C NMR spectroscopy
244
Quantitative
13
C NMR spectroscopy has been widely used to measure species
245
formed in the mixture of CO2 with aqueous amines35-37. This method is able to
246
identify and quantify carbon-containing species formed during absorption and
247
desorption processes, including bicarbonate/carbonate, and determine the total CO2
248
loading in the sample. It is not possible to distinguish the bicarbonate and carbonate
249
species separately by 13C NMR spectroscopy due to the fast proton transfer reaction 36,
250
hence only one peak appears in the
251
amount of bicarbonate and carbonate. Also, according to the work of Jakobsen, et al.,
252
the bicarbonate concentration is much higher than the carbonate concentration in the
253
highly CO2 loaded butyl-ethanolamine (BEA), methyl-di-ethanolamine (MDEA) and
254
MEA solutions
255
amount of bicarbonate is significantly higher than carbonate at the high CO2 loading
256
in the single or blended amine systems and carbonate can therefore be neglected38, 39.
13
C NMR spectrum which represents the total
36
. Our previous work and that of Shi et al. also suggested that the
257
The ratio of the amount of each species to the total amine is used to quantify
258
speciation of each amine solution under different CO2 loadings. In the example of
259
MEA displayed in Fig. 2, the ratio of carbamate species can be calculated by the ratio
260
of signal a’ or b’ or c versus the sum of signals a and a’ or the sum of signals b and b’.
261
Different calculation methods should give same results, however in practice, the 14
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integral of each carbamate signal varied slightly. To avoid this possible small variation
263
by selection of different signals, the average integral of carbamate was used in the
264
speciation calculation as shown in eqs. (8) - (10). The 13C NMR results for carbamate
265
(Fig. 2(B)) were validated by the 1H NMR results (Fig. 2(C)) and the average absolute
266
deviation (AAD) between these two methods is 0.4% as shown in Fig. 2(D).
267
In addition, the total CO2 loading in the CO2 loaded MEA solution discussed 13
268
above was also determined by HCl titration to compare with that obtained by
269
NMR spectroscopy. The CO2 loading measurement with acid-basic titration method
270
used in this work is proposed by Horwitz et al.40 This method has been used in our
271
previous work and reported by Xiao et al.21 and Zhang et al.41, the details can be
272
found in S1 in the supporting information. The AAD of the CO2 loading obtained
273
from these two methods is presented in Fig. 2(E). The results showed that the total
274
CO2 loading values obtained from NMR spectroscopy were in good agreement with
275
those obtained from acid titration when the CO2 loading was below 0.4 mole
276
CO2/mole amine, but the difference between the results from these two methods
277
appeared when the CO2 loading was higher than 0.4 mole CO2/mole amine. Fig. 2(E)
278
shows that the AAD of CO2 loading between the NMR method (eq. (12)) and the
279
titration method is 1.98% which is an acceptable deviation. In addition, the AAD
280
between these two methods for 3AP, EDA, 1,3-PDA, MEDA, MAPA, DMAEA and
281
DMAPA are 1.10%, 2.55%, 1.52%, 2.45%, 1.9%, 1.59% and 1.90%, respectively.
282
This indicates that the CO2 loading obtained by NMR method is reliable.
283
The molecular structures of each species and the stacked 15
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C
C NMR spectra for
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each amine used in this work can be found in the S2 in the supporting information
285 286
Figure 2. (A) The molecular structure of possible species in CO2 loaded MEA
287
solution; (B) The stacked 13C NMR spectrum of CO2-MEA-H2O system; (C) The
288
stacked 1H NMR spectrum of CO2-MEA-H2O system; (D) The validation of speciation
289
methods by calculating carbamate; (E) The validation of the NMR method for
290
determining the CO2 loading
291
/
292
293
(8)
( )/ ( )/
(9)
( )/ ( )/
( )/
+
( )/
(10)
294 295
4. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
296
4.1 Evaluation of CO2 absorption performance
297
In this work, the CO2 absorption capacity of each amine was investigated at 40 °C
298
with 101 kPa (100% CO2) and 10 kPa (10% CO2 in N2) CO2 partial pressure at 16
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13
299
atmospheric pressure. The details of the
C NMR spectra of CO2 loaded-amine
300
solution obtained at 40 °C with different CO2 partial pressure for each amine are
301
shown in S3 in supporting information. The molar CO2 capacity is defined as moles of
302
CO2 per mole of nitrogen in an amine to account for the different numbers of nitrogen
303
atoms in the molecule. The mass basis CO2 absorption capacity is defined as the
304
grams of CO2 per gram of amine (grams CO2/gram amine). Fig. 3 presents the CO2
305
absorption capacity in each amine on both molar and mass basis under the CO2 partial
306
pressures of 101 kPa and 10 kPa. The amine pairs which contain the same amino
307
groups but different chain lengths (C2 or C3) are presented next to each other in Fig. 3.
308
As expected, the absorption capacity of CO2 increased with an increase in CO2 gas
309
partial pressure. The extension of the chain length from C2 to C3 corresponded to a
310
higher CO2 absorption capacity for each pair of the comparable amines (Fig. 3),
311
therefore it can be inferred that the C3 chain improved the CO2 absorption capacity.
312
This conclusion is consistent with the results published by Singh et al.42. The results
313
in Fig. 3 show that diamines which contain the same carbon chain lengths increased in
314
CO2 absorption capacity at high CO2 partial pressure if one of their amino groups
315
changed from primary to secondary or tertiary (an increase of substituent on one N
316
atom). Interestingly, however, diamines of the same chain length containing either one
317
secondary or tertiary amino group, e.g. MEDA (1NC2N2) - DMAEA (1NC2N3) and
318
MAPA (1NC3N2) - DMAPA (1NC3N3), showed a different trend depending upon the
319
CO2 partial pressure used. For example, MEDA (1NC2N2) and DMAEA (1NC2N3) had
320
similar CO2 absorption capacity when pure CO2 was used in the experiments but 17
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321
DMAEA (1NC2N3) had lower CO2 absorption capacity than MEDA (1NC2N2) when
322
10% CO2 was used. A similar response to CO2 partial pressure change was also
323
displayed by MAPA (1NC3N2) and DMAPA (1NC3N3). This is likely caused by
324
differences in the overall carbamate stability and the pKa values of the amino groups.
325
As the molecular structure of each paired amines are similar so it can be inferred that
326
the pKa of each paired amine are almost same. In addition, it is well known that the
327
secondary carbamate and the dicarbamate are less stable than the monocarbamate.
328
Both of MEDA and MAPA can produce the secondary carbamate and dicarbamate but
329
the DMAEA and DMAPA only can produce the monocarbamate. The secondary
330
carbamate and dicarbamate from MEDA and MAPA are easy to decompose to be free
331
amine and monocarbamate due to H+ even at a low CO2 loading stage. In contrast, the
332
monocarbamate cannot decompose at the low CO2 loading stage due to low level of
333
H+ in the solution. The released free MEDA/MAPA and monocarbamate can
334
continues to absorb CO2 then lead to a high CO2 absorption capacity (at low CO2
335
partial pressure). For DMAEA and DMAPA, because no free amine can be released
336
from their monocarbamate, so a lower CO2 absorption capacity was obtained
337
compared to the MEDA and MAPA at a low CO2 partial pressure. As a result, the
338
different trend of the CO2 absorption capacity obtained in MEDA (1NC2N2) -
339
DMAEA (1NC2N3) and MAPA (1NC3N2) - DMAPA (1NC3N3) at the low CO2 partial
340
pressure (10% CO2). The mass basis results in Fig. 3 also indicated that the tested
341
diamines showed higher CO2 absorption capacity than the corresponding monoamines.
342
EDA (1NC2N1) demonstrated the best mass basis CO2 absorption capacity among the 18
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343
tested diamines because EDA (1NC2N1) has the smallest molecular weight (Table 1)
344
which results in a largest ratio of grams CO2/gram amine.
345 346
Figure 3. The molar/mass based CO2 absorption capacity in each aqueous amine
347
solution
348
Besides the CO2 absorption capacity in aqueous amine solutions, the formation of
349
O
350
bicarbonate (
351
-O
) and carbamate including monocarbamate (
NH2
-
,
O
O
N H
NH2
,
H 2N
N
-
,
O
O O
352
-O
N H
O
N H
OH
-
O
N
) and dicarbamate (
,
-O
OH
N H
,
O
O
N H
-
O-
O
O
O
O
O-
HO
N H
O
H N
N H
-O
N H
,
-O
O
N H
O
OO
O
-
, H N
O
-
,HN 2
O
O N H
N H
N
,
O
O-
O-
-
,
O
N H
N H
N
,
O
N
,
O
N H
N O
O-
)
353
formed in corresponding amines are also critical, not only for total CO2 loading but
354
also for CO2 desorption.
355
In the CO2 stripping process, bicarbonate and carbamate are heated to decompose
356
and release CO2, but the energy required to break the C-N bond of carbamate is more
357
than that required to break the C-O bond of bicarbonate 43. As a consequence of the
358
ease of decomposition, the amines which generate more bicarbonate during absorption 19
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359
should benefit the CO2 stripping process. It is known that, in CO2 absorption, one
360
monoamine such as MEA (1NC2OH) and 3AP (1NC3OH) can form one carbamate
361
species while one diamine is able to form more than one carbamate when it contains
362
suitable amino groups. These carbamate species can be complicated when the two
363
amino groups in the molecule are different. For example, MEDA (1NC2N2) contains
364
one primary and one secondary amino group and both of them are able to form
365
carbamates with CO2. There are two different monocarbamates and one dicarbamate
366
species produced in the reaction of MEDA (1NC2N2) with CO2, as identified by
367
NMR spectroscopy. There were small amounts of dicarbamate formed in all
368
experiments in which primary-primary diamines and primary-secondary diamines
369
were used, however the carbamate formed by the primary amino-groups appeared first
370
and remained the dominant carbamate species throughout the whole reaction for all
371
diamines studied. The dicarbamate and monocarbamate formed by the secondary
372
amino-group are therefore not discussed in detail, but their quantities (converted to
373
CO2) were added to the dominant monocarbamate formed by the primary
374
amino-group to give the sum of all carbamates. Fig.4 plots the ratio of total carbamate
375
species in each amine solution tested. As expected, higher CO2 partial pressure
376
favored bicarbonate formation in all amines and this factor impacted more on the
377
amines which contained tertiary amino groups.
20
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C
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378 379
Figure 4. The moles of carbamate/bicarbonate per mole N in each aqueous amine
380
solution
381 382
The experimental results also showed that the chain extension from C2 to C3 for
383
every comparable amine pair increased the ratio of bicarbonate to carbamate under
384
both high and low CO2 partial pressures. It is understandable that the molecular
385
structural factors which favour the carbamate stability restrict the conversion of
386
carbamate to bicarbonate in general. To gain clearer knowledge of the impact of chain
387
lengths on the conversion of carbamate to bicarbonate in the systems studied, the
388
stabilities of the carbamates from two C2 diamines and two C3 diamines have been
389
studied by quantum chemistry modelling. From quantum mechanical calculations, it is
390
clear that the carbamate zwitterions containing C2 or C3 chains are able to be
391
stabilized by intramolecular hydrogen bonding effects between the O1 atom in the
392
-COO group and the H2 atom in the -NH2R group (R = H or Me) (Fig. 5). It appears
393
that molecules with shorter carbon chains (C2 vs C3) can form more stable 21
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hydrogen
bonds,
which
can
Page 22 of 35
394
intramolecular
be
explained
by
a
shorter
395
O1(-COO)-H2(-NH2R) hydrogen bond length. Lengths of the O1(-COO)-H2(-NH2R)
396
hydrogen bonds are 1.58 Å in EDA carbamate, 1.99 Å in 1,3-PDA carbamate (R=H),
397
1.63 Å in MEDA carbamate and 2.12 Å in MAPA carbamate (R=Me). All the
398
carbamate zwitterions containing C2 chains were found to be energetically more
399
favorable than the corresponding ones containing C3 chains (Table 2). The second
400
order perturbation theory analysis of the Fock matrix in natural bond orbital (NBO)
401
basis shows the donations from the lone pair (LP) of the O1 atom in the -COO group
402
to the anti-bonding orbital of H2-N3 (BD* H2-N3) in -NH2Me group are 58.73 and
403
50.97 kcal/mol in EDA carbamate and MEDA carbamate respectively, all stronger
404
than the corresponding ones for molecules containing C3 chains (Table 3). The
405
electron cloud movement from donor to acceptor can make the molecule highly
406
polarized, therefore the stabilization of C2 carbamate should benefit more from such
407
delocalization. Consequently, the decrease of the carbon chain length from C3 to C2
408
supports carbamate formation.
409
The results also clearly show that the induction effect of the methyl substituent on
410
nitrogen produced smaller changes of bond length, relative free energy and energy of
411
hyperconjugative interactions compared to the changes caused by the chain length
412
differences.
413
22
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414 415
Figure 5. The structures of the C2 and C3 mono-carbamate species at the
416
(SMD)M06-GD3/6-31+G(d, p) level. Dashed lines indicate hydrogen bonds.
417
Table 2. Free energies (a.u.) of all the reactants and carbamate products and
418 419
relative free energiesa (kcal/mol) of carbamate products using
420
(SMD)M06-GD3/6-311++G(2d,2p)// (SMD)M06-GD3/6-31+G(d,p). C2 diamines Name
421
C3 diamines
Free
Relative free
energy
energy
(a.u.)
(kcal/mol)
CO2
-188.58390
EDA
-190.42358
EDA-Carbamate
-379.02139
MEDA
-229.69276
MEDA-Carbamate
-418.29097
a
Name
-8.73219 -8.97943
Free
Relative
energy
free energy
(a.u.)
(kcal/mol)
1,3-PDA
-229.70173
1,3-PDA-Carbamate
-418.29519
MAPA
-268.97166
MAPA-Carbamate
-457.56576
-5.99739 -6.4026
Energy values are relative to the corresponding diamine reactant + CO2.
422 423
Table 3. The second order perturbation theory analysis of the Fock matrix in NBO
424
basis for all the carbamate zwitterions under (SMD)M06-GD3/6-31+G(d,p). a 23
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Energy & Fuels
425
426
a
E(2)a (kcal/mol)
Items
chain
C3
C2
Chain Donor (i) LP O
BD* H -N
58.73
50.97
chain
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 24 of 35
Donor (i)
Acceptor (j)
1,3-PDA Carbamate
MAPA Carbamate
4.32
2.65
1
1
LP O
Acceptor (j) 2
2
EDA Carbamate
MEDA Carbamate
3
3
BD* H -N
E(2) means energy of hyperconjugative interactions.
427 428
4.2 Evaluation of CO2 desorption performance
429
As discussed above, the chain length and the amino group can affect the CO2
430
absorption capacity and the formation of carbamate and bicarbonate. DMAPA
431
demonstrate a higher CO2 absorption capacity at high CO2 partial pressure but not at
432
the low CO2 partial pressure compared to other amines. Because the CO2 mainly
433
released from carbamate and bicarbonate in the solvent regeneration process and the
434
DMAPA generate less carbamate and more bicarbonate compared to others amines at
435
high/low CO2 partial pressure, consequently, it is necessary to investigate the effect of
436
the chain length and amino group to the CO2 desorption performance of the diamines
437
in current study. It is well known that the CO2 loading in amine solution decreases as
438
the heating time increases during the CO2 desorption process. To evaluate the CO2
439
desorption performance of the diamines tested, the cyclic capacity, the initial CO2
440
release rate and the CO2 removal efficiency were investigated to assess the desorption
441
performance. CO2 stripping of each diamine on a laboratory scale was performed as
442
described in section 2.2.3. The CO2 desorption of these diamines was investigated
443
under mild conditions for 60 minutes and samples taken at different reaction times
444
were analyzed. The CO2 loading changes with the CO2 desorption time are presented 24
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445
in Fig. 6. The results showed that all the diamines had significant CO2 release in the
446
early stages after which the CO2 loading curves changed slowly with increase of
447
stripping time except for DMAEA (1NC2N3) and DMAPA (1NC3N3).
448
449
Figure 6. CO2 loading versus desorption time
450 451 452
In addition, the CO2 removal performance of the amines studied in this work was
453
evaluated by their CO2 cyclic capacity and CO2 removal efficiency. The CO2 cyclic
454
capacity ( ∆
455
equilibrium CO2 loading obtained at 40 °C and that after heating at 90 °C for one hour.
456
The CO2 removal efficiency (φ) was defined as the ratio of the removed CO2 (CO2
457
cyclic capacity) to the full CO2 loading. Note that the fully loaded CO2-rich amine
458
solution prepared with 10% CO2 partial pressure at atmosphere pressure was used in
459
this study to simulate the industrial CO2 concentration sourced from flue gas. The
!"
) of each amine was defined by the difference between the
25
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460
CO2 cyclic capacity and the CO2 removal efficiency of each amine tested are
461
expressed as eqs. (11) and (12) respectively. & '() +& '() #$. − #$.
462
∆
463
,
464
The results of CO2 cyclic capacity, CO2 removal efficiency and the mole fraction
465
of initial bicarbonate of the amines studied are displayed in Fig. 7. Each of the studied
466
diamines has a better CO2 removal performance than their corresponding monoamine
467
(MEA and 3AP) as determined by the CO2 removal efficiency and cyclic capacity.
468
These results also indicate that the C3 chain amines have better CO2 cyclic capacity
469
and better CO2 removal efficiency than the corresponding C2 amines. This is due to
470
the preference of C2 chain amines to form carbamates as discussed above. C3
471
diamines also form more bicarbonate initially, which is easier to decompose to form
472
free CO2 than carbamate. Furthermore, as predicted in the absorption study above, the
473
results in Fig. 7 also show that increasing the number of substituents on the nitrogen
474
atom increases the amount of bicarbonate formed in the absorption, which gives a
475
better cyclic capacity. Hence, for the CO2 cyclic capacity and the CO2 removal
476
efficiency, the chain length extension from C2 to C3 and an increase in substitution on
477
nitrogen atoms in diamines benefits the CO2 desorption process.
!"
∆-./" 3 456 -012.
(11)
× 100
(12)
478
26
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479 480
Figure 7. Comparison of CO2 removal performance of each studied amine
481 482
Besides the CO2 loading changes and the CO2 removal performance, the overall
483
initial CO2 release rate is also an important factor to evaluate the amine desorption
484
performance. Because the higher CO2 cyclic capacity mainly contributed to higher
485
CO2 absorption capacity which lead to more bicarbonate formed. The more
486
bicarbonate in CO2 rich solution leads to a faster initial CO2 release rate because the
487
bicarbonate is easy to decompose. So, Fig. 8 present the overall CO2 desorption
488
performance of tested amines in terms of the cyclic capacity and initial CO2 release
489
rate. The initial desorption rate was calculated using the data for the sample which
490
was collected at 2 minutes of reaction time (eq. (13)). The real CO2 release rate is
491
faster than the result obtained from eq. (13) as the reaction time was counted from the
492
time thermal heating was introduced, and CO2 release started 30 seconds later when
493
the internal temperature of the reaction solution reached 70 °C. These results, however,
494
are representative of the relative overall CO2 release rates of the diamines tested as all
495
of these desorption experiments were carried out under the same reaction conditions. 27
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496
This method is not suitable for calculation of the CO2 desorption rate over extended
497
reaction time frames, however, as the CO2 desorption rate changes significantly
498
during the reaction process.
499
:;> ?@ABA=> C;>;=D; C=B;
3 " E./ E./ " "
×+&
(13)
500 501
Figure 8. The initial desorption rate vs. cyclic capacity of each amine used in this
502
work
503
Results in Fig. 8 showed that every diamine containing a C3 chain had better
504
cyclic capacity and a faster initial CO2 desorption rate than those of its C2 analogue.
505
There are several possible factors contributing to the better CO2 desorption
506
performance of 1NC3Nn in comparison to the corresponding paired diamine 1NC2Nn.
507
Firstly, the relatively lower stability of 1NC3Nn carbamates makes these species easier
508
to decompose with heating. In addition, the solution of each of the C3 molecules has a
509
lower heat capacity than the C2 molecules due to the larger mass fraction of organic
510
components. This means that the C3 chain length diamines heat up faster than C2
511
chain length diamines. As a result, the CO2 loaded C3 diamines should decompose 28
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512
faster than CO2 loaded C2 diamines. Furthermore, the effects of viscosity on heat
513
transfer also affect the overall CO2 release. The current overall initial desorption rate,
514
however, is a valuable simple parameter for comparison of the CO2 release rate for
515
each diamine.
516
The results in Fig. 8 also showed a parallel response of the increase of cyclic
517
capacity to the increase of methyl substitution on N (x-axis), and a parallel response of
518
relative initial CO2 release rate to the chain length variation (y-axis). Hence, the best
519
performance area is at the right-top corner as summarized in the insert picture located
520
in right-bottom of Fig. 8. This suggests some favorable structural factors of amine
521
absorbents in relation to their CO2 separation performance.
522
5. CONCLUSIONS In this work, six linear diterminal diamines of 2 M concentration containing C2 or
523 524
C3
carbon
chains and
two
monoamines,
monoethanolamine
525
3-aminopropanol (3AP), of 4 M concentration, were evaluated for CO2
526
absorption-desorption performance. The CO2 absorption capacity of each amine was
527
measured at 40 °C at 101 kPa and 10 kPa of CO2 gas partial pressures. In addition, the
528
speciation in each CO2 loaded aqueous amine solution was determined by 13C and 1H
529
NMR spectroscopy at various CO2 loadings. The absorption experimental results
530
show that the chain length extension of an amine from C2 to C3 increases the CO2
531
absorption capacity and generates more bicarbonate and less carbamate. This was
532
further confirmed by the results from quantum chemistry modelling calculations. The
533
experimental results also suggest that an increase of substitution on one terminal 29
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534
nitrogen atom of a diamine benefits the formation of bicarbonate versus carbamate.
535
More substitution on one nitrogen also causes a higher CO2 absorption capacity at 101
536
kPa CO2 partial pressure. On the other hand, the desorption experimental results show
537
that, with consideration of the cyclic capacity and initial CO2 release rate, the diamine
538
chain length extension from C2 to C3 and more substitution on nitrogen also benefits
539
CO2 desorption.
540 541
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
542
The measurement of the CO2 loading by using 1M HCl titration method. The
543
molecular structures of each species and the 13C NMR spectra for each amine used in
544
this work.
545 546 547
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The authors are very grateful for the CSIRO PhD student scholarship (R-09237-1)
548
to support this research and would like to acknowledge the research contribution to
549
the CO2 loaded amines test by the CSIRO PCC team in Australia. The authors also
550
would like to express thanks for the financial support from the National Natural
551
Science Foundation of China (NSFC Nos. 21536003, 21476064, 21376067 and
552
51521006), National Key Technology R & D Program (MOST-No. 2014BAC18B04),
553
Graduate Student Innovation Project of Hunan Province (CX2016B121). Specialized
554
Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of Higher Education (MOE-No.
555
20130161110025), China’s State “Project 985” in Hunan University Novel 30
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Energy & Fuels
556
Technology Research & Development for CO2 Capture, and China Outstanding
557
Engineer Training Plan for Students of Chemical Engineering & Technology in Hunan
558
University (MOE-No. 2011-40), Innovative Research Team Development Plan
559
(MOE-No. IRT1238) is also gratefully acknowledged. China Scholarship Council
560
(201606130057) are also greatly appreciated.
31
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561
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Wang, Y.; Zhao, L.; Otto, A.; Robinius, M.; Stolten, D., A Review of Post-combustion CO2
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