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Effect of Sodium Bromide on CaO-Based Sorbents Derived from Three Kinds of Sources for CO2 Capture
Author(s) -
Cheng Shen,
Cong Luo,
Tong Luo,
Jiaxin Xu,
Bowen Lu,
Shaolong Liu,
Liqi Zhang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.0c00219
Subject(s) - sorbent , sorption , carbonation , chemistry , calcination , sodium , dolomite , alkali metal , carbonatation , calcium looping , adsorption , inorganic chemistry , nuclear chemistry , chemical engineering , mineralogy , organic chemistry , catalysis , engineering
The calcium looping (CaL), which applies carbonation/calcination cyclic reactions of a CaO sorbent, has received extensive attention for postcombustion CO 2 capture. However, as the number of cyclic reactions increased, the capture efficiency of regenerated CaO decreased rapidly. Sodium doping was proposed for modification of a CaO sorbent, but there was little research on whether sodium doping had a good effect on different kinds of sorbents. In this paper, three different kinds of calcium-based sorbents, i.e., CaCO 3 , dolomite, and SG-CaO, were modified by NaBr to explore the effect of sodium on CO 2 capture performance. The results showed that the modification effects of sodium on three kinds of precursors were different. For CaCO 3 , the modification effect of sodium doping was the best. After 50 cycles, the sorption capacity of CaO/NaBr was over 3.5 times that of an unmodified sorbent; for dolomite, sodium had a moderate effect during initial cycles and then showed obvious improvement in the stability of the sorbent, the sorption capacity of the modified dolomite increased by over 30% after 50 cycles; for the SG-CaO, sodium had a negative effect, the sorption capacity of the modified sorbent decreased by about 30% after 50 cycles. When the atmosphere contained SO 2 , the doping of an alkali metal also showed a certain effect.

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