Cargando…

Optimization the Process of Chemically Modified Carbon Nanofiber Coated Monolith via Response Surface Methodology for CO(2) Capture

In the present study, a sequence of experiments was performed to assess the influence of the key process parameters on the formation of a carbon nanofiber-coated monolith (CNFCM), using a four-level factorial design in response surface methodology (RSM). The effect of reaction temperature, hydrocarb...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Malekbala, Mohamad Rasool, Soltani, Soroush, Abdul Rashid, Suraya, Abdullah, Luqman Chuah, Rashid, Umer, Nehdi, Imededdine Arbi, Choong, Thomas Shean Yaw, Teo, Siow Hwa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7179043/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32290065
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma13071775
_version_ 1783525591873486848
author Malekbala, Mohamad Rasool
Soltani, Soroush
Abdul Rashid, Suraya
Abdullah, Luqman Chuah
Rashid, Umer
Nehdi, Imededdine Arbi
Choong, Thomas Shean Yaw
Teo, Siow Hwa
author_facet Malekbala, Mohamad Rasool
Soltani, Soroush
Abdul Rashid, Suraya
Abdullah, Luqman Chuah
Rashid, Umer
Nehdi, Imededdine Arbi
Choong, Thomas Shean Yaw
Teo, Siow Hwa
author_sort Malekbala, Mohamad Rasool
collection PubMed
description In the present study, a sequence of experiments was performed to assess the influence of the key process parameters on the formation of a carbon nanofiber-coated monolith (CNFCM), using a four-level factorial design in response surface methodology (RSM). The effect of reaction temperature, hydrocarbon flow rate, catalyst and catalyst promoter were examined using RSM to enhance the formation yield of CNFs on a monolith substrate. To calculate carbon yield, a quadratic polynomial model was modified through multiple regression analysis and the best possible reaction conditions were found as follows: a reaction temperature of 800 °C, furfuryl alcohol flow of 0.08525 mL/min, ferrocene catalyst concentration of 2.21 g. According to the characterization study, the synthesized CNFs showed a high graphitization which were uniformly distributed on a monolith substrate. Besides this, the feasibility of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) adsorption from the gaseous mixture (N(2)/CO(2)) under a range of experimental conditions was investigated at monolithic column. To get the most out of the CO(2) capture, an as-prepared sample was post-modified using ammonia. Furthermore, a deactivation model (DM) was introduced for the purpose of studying the breakthrough curves. The CO(2) adsorption onto CNFCM was experimentally examined under following operating conditions: a temperature of 30–50 °C, pressure of 1–2 bar, flow rate of 50–90 mL/min, and CO(2) feed amount of 10–40 vol.%. A lower adsorption capacity and shorter breakthrough time were detected by escalating the temperature. On the other hand, the capacity for CO(2) adsorption increased by raising the CO(2) feed amount, feed flow rate, and operating pressure. The comparative evaluation of CO(2) uptake over unmodified and modified CNFCM adsorbents confirmed that the introduced modification procedure caused a substantial improvement in CO(2) adsorption.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7179043
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-71790432020-04-28 Optimization the Process of Chemically Modified Carbon Nanofiber Coated Monolith via Response Surface Methodology for CO(2) Capture Malekbala, Mohamad Rasool Soltani, Soroush Abdul Rashid, Suraya Abdullah, Luqman Chuah Rashid, Umer Nehdi, Imededdine Arbi Choong, Thomas Shean Yaw Teo, Siow Hwa Materials (Basel) Article In the present study, a sequence of experiments was performed to assess the influence of the key process parameters on the formation of a carbon nanofiber-coated monolith (CNFCM), using a four-level factorial design in response surface methodology (RSM). The effect of reaction temperature, hydrocarbon flow rate, catalyst and catalyst promoter were examined using RSM to enhance the formation yield of CNFs on a monolith substrate. To calculate carbon yield, a quadratic polynomial model was modified through multiple regression analysis and the best possible reaction conditions were found as follows: a reaction temperature of 800 °C, furfuryl alcohol flow of 0.08525 mL/min, ferrocene catalyst concentration of 2.21 g. According to the characterization study, the synthesized CNFs showed a high graphitization which were uniformly distributed on a monolith substrate. Besides this, the feasibility of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) adsorption from the gaseous mixture (N(2)/CO(2)) under a range of experimental conditions was investigated at monolithic column. To get the most out of the CO(2) capture, an as-prepared sample was post-modified using ammonia. Furthermore, a deactivation model (DM) was introduced for the purpose of studying the breakthrough curves. The CO(2) adsorption onto CNFCM was experimentally examined under following operating conditions: a temperature of 30–50 °C, pressure of 1–2 bar, flow rate of 50–90 mL/min, and CO(2) feed amount of 10–40 vol.%. A lower adsorption capacity and shorter breakthrough time were detected by escalating the temperature. On the other hand, the capacity for CO(2) adsorption increased by raising the CO(2) feed amount, feed flow rate, and operating pressure. The comparative evaluation of CO(2) uptake over unmodified and modified CNFCM adsorbents confirmed that the introduced modification procedure caused a substantial improvement in CO(2) adsorption. MDPI 2020-04-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7179043/ /pubmed/32290065 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma13071775 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Malekbala, Mohamad Rasool
Soltani, Soroush
Abdul Rashid, Suraya
Abdullah, Luqman Chuah
Rashid, Umer
Nehdi, Imededdine Arbi
Choong, Thomas Shean Yaw
Teo, Siow Hwa
Optimization the Process of Chemically Modified Carbon Nanofiber Coated Monolith via Response Surface Methodology for CO(2) Capture
title Optimization the Process of Chemically Modified Carbon Nanofiber Coated Monolith via Response Surface Methodology for CO(2) Capture
title_full Optimization the Process of Chemically Modified Carbon Nanofiber Coated Monolith via Response Surface Methodology for CO(2) Capture
title_fullStr Optimization the Process of Chemically Modified Carbon Nanofiber Coated Monolith via Response Surface Methodology for CO(2) Capture
title_full_unstemmed Optimization the Process of Chemically Modified Carbon Nanofiber Coated Monolith via Response Surface Methodology for CO(2) Capture
title_short Optimization the Process of Chemically Modified Carbon Nanofiber Coated Monolith via Response Surface Methodology for CO(2) Capture
title_sort optimization the process of chemically modified carbon nanofiber coated monolith via response surface methodology for co(2) capture
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7179043/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32290065
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma13071775
work_keys_str_mv AT malekbalamohamadrasool optimizationtheprocessofchemicallymodifiedcarbonnanofibercoatedmonolithviaresponsesurfacemethodologyforco2capture
AT soltanisoroush optimizationtheprocessofchemicallymodifiedcarbonnanofibercoatedmonolithviaresponsesurfacemethodologyforco2capture
AT abdulrashidsuraya optimizationtheprocessofchemicallymodifiedcarbonnanofibercoatedmonolithviaresponsesurfacemethodologyforco2capture
AT abdullahluqmanchuah optimizationtheprocessofchemicallymodifiedcarbonnanofibercoatedmonolithviaresponsesurfacemethodologyforco2capture
AT rashidumer optimizationtheprocessofchemicallymodifiedcarbonnanofibercoatedmonolithviaresponsesurfacemethodologyforco2capture
AT nehdiimededdinearbi optimizationtheprocessofchemicallymodifiedcarbonnanofibercoatedmonolithviaresponsesurfacemethodologyforco2capture
AT choongthomassheanyaw optimizationtheprocessofchemicallymodifiedcarbonnanofibercoatedmonolithviaresponsesurfacemethodologyforco2capture
AT teosiowhwa optimizationtheprocessofchemicallymodifiedcarbonnanofibercoatedmonolithviaresponsesurfacemethodologyforco2capture