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High Temperature CO(2) Capture Performance and Kinetic Analysis of Novel Potassium Stannate
For the first time, the use of stannate-based sorbents was investigated as high temperature CO(2) sorption to evaluate their potential to contribute towards reducing carbon emissions. The sorption capacity and kinetics of commercial tin oxide, sodium, potassium and calcium stannates and lab synthesi...
Autores principales: | , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2023
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9917123/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36768642 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms24032321 |
Sumario: | For the first time, the use of stannate-based sorbents was investigated as high temperature CO(2) sorption to evaluate their potential to contribute towards reducing carbon emissions. The sorption capacity and kinetics of commercial tin oxide, sodium, potassium and calcium stannates and lab synthesised potassium stannates were tested using thermogravimetric analysis. Commercial K(2)SnO(3) was found to possess the largest CO(2) uptake capacity (2.77 mmol CO(2)/g or 12.2 wt%) at 700 °C, which is among the highest for potassium sorbents, but the CO(2) desorption was not successful. On the contrary, the in-house synthesised K-stannate (K-B) using facile solid-state synthesis outperformed the other sorbents, resulting in a CO(2) uptake of 7.3 wt% after 5 min, an adsorption rate (0.016 mg/s) one order of magnitude higher than the other stannates, and stability after 40 cycles. The XRD and XPS analyses showed that K-B contains a mixture of K(2)SnO(3) (76%) and K(4)SnO(4) (21%), while the Scherrer crystal sizes confirmed good resistance to sintering for the potassium stannates. Among the apparent kinetic model tested, the pseudo-second order model was the most suitable to predict the CO(2) sorption process of K-B, indicating that chemical adsorption is dominant, while film-diffusion resistance and intra-particle diffusion resistance governed the sorption process in K-B. In summary, this work shows that solid-state synthesised potassium stannate could be an effective sorbent for high temperature separation, and additional work is required to further elucidate its potential. |
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