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Rate modeling of CO2 stripping from potassium carbonate promoted by piperazine
Authors:Babatunde A Oyenekan  Gary T Rochelle
Institution:2. The University of Texas at Austin, Department of Chemical Engineering, Luminant Carbon Management Program, 200 E. Dean Keeton St. Stop CO400, Austin,TX 78712-1589, USA;1. Delft University of Technology, Process & Energy Laboratory, 2628 CB 39 Delft, The Netherlands;2. Julius MONTZ GmbH, Hofstraβe 82, 40723 Hilden, Germany;1. The University of Texas at Austin, Department of Chemical Engineering. Luminant Carbon Management Program, 200 E Dean Keeton St. Stop C0400, Austin, TX 78712-1589 USA;1. Texas Carbon Management Program, McKetta Department of Chemical Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, 200 East Dean Keeton Street, C0400, Austin, TX 78712-1589, United States;2. Separations Research Program, Pickle Research Campus, The University of Texas at Austin, 10100 Burnet Road, Austin, TX 78758, United States
Abstract:This work presents results from a rate-based model of strippers at normal pressure (160 kPa) and vacuum (30 kPa) in Aspen Custom Modeler® (ACM) for the desorption of CO2 from 5 m K+/2.5 m piperazine (PZ). The model solves the material, equilibrium, summation and enthalpy (MESH) equations, the heat and mass transfer rate equations, and computes the reboiler duty and equivalent work for the stripping process. Simulations were performed with IMTP #40 random packing and a temperature approach on the hot side of the cross-exchanger of 5 °C and 10 °C. A “short and fat” stripper requires 7–15% less total equivalent work than a “tall and skinny” one because of the reduced pressure drop. The vacuum and normal pressure strippers require 230 s and 115 s of liquid retention time to get an equivalent work 4% greater than the minimum work. Stripping at 30 kPa was controlled by mass transfer with reaction in the boundary layer and diffusion of reactants and products (88% resistance at the rich end and 71% resistance at the lean end). Stripping at 160 kPa was controlled by mass transfer with equilibrium reactions (84% resistance at the rich end and 74% resistance at the lean end) at 80% flood. The typical predicted energy requirement for stripping and compression to 10 MPa to achieve 90% CO2 removal was 37 kJ/gmol CO2. This is about 25% of the net output of a 500 MW power plant with 90% CO2 removal.
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