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Optimization of the structural characteristics of CaO and its effective stabilization yield high-capacity CO 2 sorbents

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TLDR
A facile one-pot synthesis approach to yield highly effective, MgO-stabilized, CaO-based CO2 sorbents featuring highly porous multishelled morphologies, identified as an essential feature to yield a high-performance sorbent.
Abstract
Calcium looping, a CO2 capture technique, may offer a mid-term if not near-term solution to mitigate climate change, triggered by the yet increasing anthropogenic CO2 emissions. A key requirement for the economic operation of calcium looping is the availability of highly effective CaO-based CO2 sorbents. Here we report a facile synthesis route that yields hollow, MgO-stabilized, CaO microspheres featuring highly porous multishelled morphologies. As a thermal stabilizer, MgO minimized the sintering-induced decay of the sorbents’ CO2 capacity and ensured a stable CO2 uptake over multiple operation cycles. Detailed electron microscopy-based analyses confirm a compositional homogeneity which is identified, together with the characteristics of its porous structure, as an essential feature to yield a high-performance sorbent. After 30 cycles of repeated CO2 capture and sorbent regeneration, the best performing material requires as little as 11 wt.% MgO for structural stabilization and exceeds the CO2 uptake of the limestone-derived reference material by ~500%.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Metal oxide redox chemistry for chemical looping processes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the mechanisms by which oxygen carriers undergo redox reactions and how these carriers can be incorporated into robust chemical looping reactors, central to which are redox cycles of metal oxides.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical looping beyond combustion – a perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the use of oxygen carriers or redox catalysts for chemical production has been investigated and shown to offer significant opportunities for process intensification and exergy loss minimization.
Journal ArticleDOI

CO2 Capture at Medium to High Temperature Using Solid Oxide-Based Sorbents: Fundamental Aspects, Mechanistic Insights, and Recent Advances.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the fundamental aspects underpinning solid CO2 sorbents based on alkali and alkaline earth metal oxides operating at medium to high temperature: how their structure, chemical composition, and morphology impact their performance and long-term use.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accurate Control of Cage-Like CaO Hollow Microspheres for Enhanced CO2 Capture in Calcium Looping via a Template-Assisted Synthesis Approach.

TL;DR: The development of synthetic CaO-based sorbents for enhanced CO2 capture in calcium looping via a template-assisted synthesis approach, where carbonaceous spheres derived from hydrothermal reaction of starch are used as the templates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review on the development of sorbents for calcium looping

TL;DR: The CaL process is a promising CO2 capture technology, which uses CaO-based sorbents by employing a reversible reaction between CaO and CO2, generally named as carbonation and cal... as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nanoengineering of Inorganic and Hybrid Hollow Spheres by Colloidal Templating

TL;DR: Scanning and transmission electron microscopy images demonstrate that the wall thickness of the hollow spheres can be readily controlled by varying the number of nanoparticle-polymer deposition cycles, and the size and shape are determined by the morphology of the templating colloid.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adsorbent Materials for Carbon Dioxide Capture from Large Anthropogenic Point Sources

TL;DR: The CO(2) adsorption behavior of several different classes of solid carbon dioxide adsorbents, including zeolites, activated carbons, calcium oxides, hydrotalcites, organic-inorganic hybrids, and metal-organic frameworks are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon Capture and Storage

TL;DR: Carbon capture and storage (CCS) covers a broad range of technologies that are being developed to allow carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from fossil fuel use at large point sources to be transported to safe geological storage, rather than being emitted to the atmosphere.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent advances in solid sorbents for CO2 capture and new development trends

TL;DR: In this article, the authors organize the CO2 sorbents according to their working temperatures by classifying them as such: (1) low-temperature ( 400 °C), since the sorption capacity, kinetics, recycling stability and cost are important parameters when evaluating a sorbent.
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