Investigation on the Performance of CO 2 Absorption in Ceramic Hollow-Fiber Gas/Liquid Membrane Contactors.
Chii-Dong HoHsuan ChangYu-Han ChenThiam Leng ChewJui-Wei KePublished in: Membranes (2023)
The absorption efficiencies of CO 2 in ceramic hollow-fiber membrane contactors using monoethanolamine (MEA) absorbent under both cocurrent- and countercurrent-flow operations were investigated theoretically and experimentally; various MEA absorbent flow rates, CO 2 feed flow rates, and inlet CO 2 concentrations were used as parameters. Theoretical predictions of the CO 2 absorption flux were analyzed by developing the mathematical formulations based on Happel's free surface model in terms of mass transfer resistances in series. The experiments of the CO 2 absorption were conducted by using alumina (Al 2 O 3 ) hollow-fiber membranes to confirm the accuracy of the theoretical predictions. The simplified expression of the Sherwood number was formulated to calculate the mass transfer coefficient of the CO 2 absorption incorporating experimental data. The data were obtained numerically using the fourth-order Runge-Kutta method to predict the concentration distribution and absorption rate enhancement under various fiber packing configurations accomplished by the CO 2 /N 2 stream passing through the fiber cells. The operations of the hollow-fiber membrane contactor encapsulating N = 7 fiber cells and N = 19 fiber cells of different packing densities were fabricated in this work to examine the device performance. The accuracy derivation between experimental results and theoretical predictions for cocurrent- and countercurrent-flow operations were 1.31×10-2≤E≤4.35×10-2 and 3.90×10-3≤E≤2.43×10-2, respectively. A maximum of 965.5% CO 2 absorption rate enhancement was found in the module with embedding multiple fiber cells compared with that in the device with inserting single-fiber cell. Implementing more fiber cells offers an inexpensive method of improving the absorption efficiency, and thus the operations of the ceramic hollow-fiber membrane contactor with implementing more fiber cells propose a low-priced design to improve the absorption rate enhancement. The higher overall CO 2 absorption rate was achieved in countercurrent-flow operations than that in cocurrent-flow operations.