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|a dc
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|a Simeon, Fritz
|e author
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|a Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
|e contributor
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|a Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
|e contributor
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|a MIT Energy Initiative
|e contributor
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|a Stern, Michael
|e contributor
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|a Simeon, Fritz
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|a Herzog, Howard J.
|e contributor
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|a Hatton, T. Alan
|e contributor
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|a Hammer, Thomas
|e author
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|a Landes, Harald
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|a Herzog, Howard J.
|e author
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|a Stern, Michael
|e author
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|a Hatton, T. Alan
|e author
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|a Electrochemically mediated separation for carbon capture
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|b Elsevier,
|c 2014-12-03T14:25:43Z.
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|z Get fulltext
|u http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/92001
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|a Carbon capture technology has been proposed as an effective approach for the mitigation of anthropogenic CO[subscript 2] emissions. Thermal-swing separation technologies based on wet chemical scrubbing show potential for facilitating CO[subscript 2] capture at industrial-scale carbon emitters; however, the total operational and capital costs resulting from the high energy consumption are prohibitive for their implementation. Electrochemically mediated processes are proposed to be the next generation of CO[subscript 2] separation technology that can enable carbon capture to be a more viable option for carbon mitigation in the near future. This technology utilizes electrochemically active sorbents that undergo significant changes in their molecular affinity for CO[subscript 2] molecules as they progress through an electrochemical cycle. This nearly isothermal separation process consumes electrical energy to facilitate effective CO[subscript 2] capture and regeneration processes under more benign conditions of sorption and desorption than in traditional continuous wet-scrubber operations. This electrically driven separation process has the potential to significantly reduce the difficulty of retrofitting CO[subscript 2] capture units to existing fossil fuel-fired power generators. The ease of installing an electrically driven separation system would also allow its application to other industrial carbon emitters. The design of such a system, however, requires careful consideration since it involves both heterogeneous electrochemical activation/deactivation of sorbents and homogeneous complexation of the activated sorbents with CO[subscript 2] molecules. Optimization of the energy efficiency requires minimizing the irreversibility associated with these processes. In this study, we use a general exergy analysis to evaluate the minimum thermodynamic work based on the system design and the electrochemical parameters of quinodal redox-active molecules. Using this thermodynamic framework, our results suggest that the proposed technology could capture CO[subscript 2] from a dilute post-combustion flue gas and regenerate CO[subscript 2] at 1 bar with high efficiency, if a two-stage design is effectively implemented.
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|a Siemens Corporation (Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center of Knowledge Interchange Project Fund)
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|a en_US
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|a Article
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|t Energy Procedia
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