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Development of High Temperature Water Sorbents Based on Zeolites, Dolomite, Lanthanum Oxide and Coke.

Esther AchaIon AgirreVictoria Laura Barrio
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Methanation is gaining attention as it produces green methane from CO 2 and H 2 , through Power-to-Gas technology. This process could be improved by in situ water sorption. The main difficulty for this process intensification is to find effective water sorbents at useful reaction temperatures (275-400 °C). The present work comprises the study of the water sorption capacity of different materials at 25-400 °C. The sorption capacity of the most studied solid sorbents (zeolites 3A & 4A) was compared to other materials such as dolomite, La 2 O 3 and cokes. In trying to improve their stability and sorption capacity at high temperatures, all these materials were modified with alkaline-earth metals (Ba, Ca & Mg). Lanthana-Ba and dolomite sorbents were the most promising materials, reaching water sorption values of 120 and 102 mg H2O /g sorbent , respectively, even at 300 °C, i.e., values 10-times higher than the achieved ones with zeolites 3A or 4A under the same operating conditions. At these high temperatures, around 300 °C, the water sorption process was concluded to be closer to chemisorption than to physisorption.
Keyphrases
  • electron transfer
  • sewage sludge
  • solid phase extraction
  • anaerobic digestion
  • high temperature
  • room temperature
  • working memory
  • climate change
  • carbon dioxide