articleScienceSep 25, 2009Closed access

Amine Scrubbing for CO 2 Capture

The University of Texas at Austin

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Amine scrubbing has been used to separate carbon dioxide (CO2) from natural gas and hydrogen since 1930. It is a robust technology and is ready to be tested and used on a larger scale for CO2 capture from coal-fired power plants. The minimum work requirement to separate CO2 from coal-fired flue gas and compress CO2 to 150 bar is 0.11 megawatt-hours per metric ton of CO2. Process and solvent improvements should reduce the energy consumption to 0.2 megawatt-hour per ton of CO2. Other advanced technologies will not provide energy-efficient or timely solutions to CO2 emission from conventional coal-fired power plants.

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Data scrubbing
  • Tonne
  • Ton
  • Flue gas
  • Coal
  • Waste management
  • Carbon dioxide
  • Amine gas treating
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Affordable and clean energy
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