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Activated Carbon Fiber Cloth Electrothermal Swing Adsorption System

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TLDR
Results allow the modeling of electrothermal desorption of organic vapors from gas streams with in-vessel condensation to optimize operating conditions of the system during regeneration of the adsorbent.
Abstract
Capture and recovery of hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from gas streams using physical adsorption onto activated carbon fiber cloth (ACFC) is demonstrated on the bench-scale. This system is regenerated electrothermally, by passing an electric current directly through the ACFC. The adsorbate desorbs from the ACFC, rapidly condenses on the inside walls of the adsorber, and then drains from the adsorber as a pure liquid. Rapid electrothermal desorption exhibits such unique characteristics as extremely low purge gas flow rate, rapid rate of ACFC heating, rapid mass transfer kinetics inherent to ACFC, and in-vessel condensation. An existing system was scaled up 500%, and the new system was modeled using material and energy balances. Adsorption isotherms using methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) and ACFC were obtained while electricity passed through the ACFC and at temperatures above MEK's boiling point. These isotherms agreed within 7% to Dubinin-Radushkevich modeled isotherms that were extrapolated from independently determined gravimetric measurements obtained at lower temperatures. Energy and material balances for the electrothermal desorption of organic vapors and ACFC agree to within 7% of experimentally measured values. These results allow the modeling of electrothermal desorption of organic vapors from gas streams with in-vessel condensation to optimize operating conditions of the system during regeneration of the adsorbent.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Regeneration of carbonaceous adsorbents. Part I: Thermal Regeneration

TL;DR: In this article, more than 300 scientific sources are reviewed with a view to developing an exhaustive collection and description of all such methods, and a series of criteria to classify existing methods (as well as any method that may be proposed in the future).
Journal ArticleDOI

CO2 Capture by Temperature Swing Adsorption: Use of Hot CO2-Rich Gas for Regeneration

TL;DR: In this paper, a three-step cycle of adsorption, hot gas purge, and cooling was used for CO2 removal from gas streams, where the model predictions agreed quite well with experimental results in terms of breakthrough and results for cycle designs based on indirect heating followed by hot product gas purge.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adsorption of volatile organic compounds onto activated carbon cloths derived from a novel regenerated cellulosic precursor.

TL;DR: The ACC were also electrically conductive and showed potential for regeneration by the Joule effect, as determined from macroscopic electrical measurements before and after n-hexane adsorption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon dioxide capture and recovery by means of TSA and/or VSA

TL;DR: In this paper, a comparison of different methods of desorption by heating, purge and/or vacuum is performed with a 5A zeolite on a small laboratory column with heating from the wall.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adsorption and electrothermal desorption of organic vapors using activated carbon adsorbents with novel morphologies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared and contrasted the properties of activated carbon beads, carbon fiber cloth and activated carbon monolith (ACM) when using electrothermal-swing adsorption.
References
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Book

Gas Separation by Adsorption Processes

Ralph T. Yang
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an analysis of gas mixtures rate processes in adsorbers adsorber dynamics, bed profiles and breakthrough curves cyclic gas separation processes and pressure-swing adsorption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrical behaviour of activated carbon cloth heated by the joule effect: desorption application

TL;DR: In this paper, the electrical resistance of activated carbon cloth is measured using the intrinsic characteristics of various fabrics and to the temperature reached at the surface of the material, which is a relevant parameter to characterize these materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adsorption and Electrothermal Desorption of Hazardous Organic Vapors

TL;DR: In this paper, an annular-cartridge configuration of the activated carbon fiber cloth allows low pressure drop and rapid electrothermal regeneration, and a bench-scale activated-carbon fiber-cloth adsorption, electro-thermal desorption and condensation system was designed, built, and operated to demonstrate its ability to capture and recover organic hazardous air pollutants from airstreams.

Experimental and Modeled Results Describing the Adsorption of Acetone and Benzene onto

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used Activated Carbon Fibers (ACF) to adsorb ppmv concentrations of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from laboratory generated gas streams.
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