The present application relates generally to green environment and particularly to carbon dioxide filtering, for example, carbon capture (CC) in flue gas, structure, apparatus and methods thereof.
Carbon dioxide (CO2 or CO2) capture from power plant and industrial flue gas is a step toward reducing the emission of greenhouse gas into the atmosphere. Methods for carbon capture (CC) include absorption by liquids, adsorption by solids including metal organic frameworks, and filtering from other molecules by membranes. Generally, the goal of CC is to sequester the carbon dioxide as a first step in a carbon removal process, after which it is either stored in some stable form for millennia or reused in an industry, such as enhanced oil recovery, beverages or plastics. The downstream industry may need various degrees of purity for the carbon dioxide. Long term storage usually involves compression or chilling to a liquid form before moving it in pipelines or trucks, and the energy needed for compression or chilling is minimized if the CO2 is not contaminated with other gases. Beverage use should have high purity for human consumption. Plastic use should have purity to optimize the required chemical reactions. Flue gas is a mixture of air from the intake before combustion, which is mostly nitrogen and oxygen, plus the products and residuals from combustion, which are generally water and carbon dioxide if hydrocarbons are burned, but also the combustion products of other elements in the fuel such as oxides of sulfur and nitrogen along with various incombustibles if the fuel is impure.
The summary of the disclosure is given to aid understanding of an apparatus and method of carbon dioxide membrane filtering with graphene crown pores, and not with an intent to limit the disclosure or the invention. It should be understood that various aspects and features of the disclosure may advantageously be used separately in some instances, or in combination with other aspects and features of the disclosure in other instances. Accordingly, variations and modifications may be made to the apparatus, structure and method of operations to achieve different effects.
In an aspect, a carbon dioxide membrane filter can include at least one graphene sheet interspersed with holes that have open carbon bonds. The open carbon bonds can be filled with another element, where each of the holes which are tipped with another element results in, or makes up, a crown pore. In one aspect, another element can be oxygen. In another aspect, another element can be nitrogen.
In another aspect, the carbon dioxide membrane filter can also include a porous substrate. The graphene sheet can be placed on the porous substrate for support, for example, against driving pressure. In an aspect, the porous substrate can have a honeycomb-like array of channels. In another aspect, the porous substrate can have an anodic aluminum oxide pore-structure.
In another aspect, the crown pore can be created by taking away six carbon atoms from the graphene sheet and replacing carbon edges of a hole created by removal of the six carbon atoms with atoms of another element.
In yet another aspect, the graphene sheet can have an irregular mesh shape. Yet in another aspect, the graphene sheet can be stretched to enlarge the crown pore.
In still another aspect, the carbon dioxide membrane filter can include multiple graphene sheets arranged in series.
In another aspect, a carbon dioxide membrane filter can include a graphene sheet of carbon in a repeated hexagonal pattern. The graphene sheet can have holes, for example, interspersed, where the holes have open carbon bonds filled with another element. Each of the holes tipped or bonded with another element can result in or make up a crown pore. The graphene sheet can be shaped to a cylindrical structure having a zig-zag surface pattern with crown pores. Carbon dioxide can be permitted to enter, via the crown pores, from a first side of the cylindrical structure to a second side of the cylindrical structure, where the first side and the second side have different pressures. In one aspect, the first side can be the outside of the cylindrical structure and the second side can be the inside of the cylindrical structure, where the outside has higher pressure than the inside. In another aspect, the first side can be the inside of the cylindrical structure and the second side can be the outside of the cylindrical structure, where the inside has higher pressure than the outside.
In yet another aspect, a graphene sheet can have at least one hole, where edges of a hole have exposed carbon atoms bonded with another element, which can result in a crown pore. In one aspect, another element can be oxygen. In another aspect, another element can be nitrogen.
In still yet another aspect, a method of fabricating a carbon dioxide membrane filter can include causing ion-beam-sculpting on a graphene supported by a porous substrate. The method can also include performing oxidative etching to enlarge pores in the graphene, where carbon atoms exposed at the edges of the pores are bonded with another element.
In another aspect, a method of carbon capture can include filtering carbon dioxide from flue gas using graphene having pores tipped with oxygen, where the flue gas is provided in an area of a first side of the graphene, and the carbon dioxide in the flue gas is caused to be transported to an area of a second side of the graphene via at least one of the pores.
In another aspect, a method of carbon capture can include filtering carbon dioxide from flue gas using multiple layers of graphene having pores tipped with oxygen, where the flue gas is provided in an area of a first side of the graphene, and the carbon dioxide in the flue gas is caused to be transported to an area of a second side of the graphene via at least one of the pores.
Advantageously, the carbon dioxide membrane filter with graphene crown pores in one or more embodiments can provide higher selectivity for separating carbon dioxide from nitrogen and other gases, and higher permeance for carbon dioxide at this selectivity. Another benefit is that a chemically stable filter can be provided for filtering carbon dioxide.
Further features as well as the structure and operation of various embodiments are described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings. In the drawings, like reference numbers indicate identical or functionally similar elements.
Carbon capture (CC) in flue gas separates carbon dioxide gas from the other main gases, which can be nitrogen and water with trace amounts of other molecules such as sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and so on. In an embodiment, a filter structured at the atomic level can be provided that passes carbon dioxide gas and blocks nitrogen gas (N2).
In an embodiment, functionalized graphene with oxygen, e.g., oxygen-crown pores, can be provided. In an embodiment, oxygen-crown pore may select molecules by electronic charge. In an embodiment, a CO2 molecule (e.g., 106) can be trapped in the oxygen-crown pore.
In an embodiment, oxygen-terminated crown ether pores in graphene can be provided. Even though CO2 and N2 have similar molecule-sizes, oxygen-terminated crown pores have special electrostatic interactions with CO2 but not with other gas molecules in the flue gas, which promotes the selective transport of CO2 through crown pores. An embodiment of the structure, method can use the charge distribution at the edge of a pore (e.g., crown pores), in particular the Coulomb force, to separate molecules that pass through the pore from molecules that cannot.
In an embodiment, oxygen-terminated crown pore in graphene disclosed herein can be implemented or used for the air environment, and it can also be for charge-neutral molecules, e.g., CO2, which nevertheless have an internal charge distribution (C: 0.8 e and O: −0.4e, where e is the elementary charge) that causes the oxygen-terminated crown pore to selectively attract part of the molecule and repel another part. For certain charge-neutral molecules, the attraction at close range overwhelms the repulsion at close range and the molecule is actively pulled into the pore, whereupon it can easily go through with a high enough initial energy or after a collision by another particle.
In an oxygen-terminated crown pore in graphene, the exposed carbon atoms on the pore edge are bonded with oxygen to make a crown (e.g., but not limited to, 18-6) pore. Because of the distribution of electrons in the chemical bond, the carbon atoms near the pore are slightly positively charged while the oxygen atoms have a slightly negative charge, which can electrostatically affect nearby molecules outside the graphene (along with the van der Waals interaction). Carbon dioxide is a linear molecule with an oxygen at each end and carbon in the middle. The oxygens in the CO2 are slightly negatively charged while the carbon atom is positively charged. When the CO2 is inside the pore, the electrostatic interaction becomes attractive because the positively charged carbon atom in CO2 is now exposed to negatively charged oxygen atoms on the crown pore edge. For instance, a favorable interaction can be expected between CO2 and the crown pore. In an aspect, this can indicate that the crown pore can be highly selective for the CO2 transport and block other gas molecules in the flue gas.
In an embodiment, the crown pore with a CO2 molecule inside is illustrated in
The results for nitrogen gas (N2) are shown in
Generally, there can be two consecutive steps for a gas molecule to enter the pore. Firstly, a CO2 or N2 molecule will be attracted by graphene and then diffuse laterally near the graphene surface. During this step, the energy change is ˜4 kBT for the CO2 molecule (
Whether other gas molecules can go through the crown pore (when γ=0) can also be investigated. As shown in
In an embodiment, the graphene sheet or film can be stretched to a degree. In an embodiment, at a relative stretching of 1.0% or more (e.g., of graphene film), the crown pore passes CO2 and H2O and repels N2. In an embodiment, this can be a filter to separate CO2 from N2. For example, CO2 passes through oxygen crown pores in graphene. The CO2 and H2O can be separated from each other as well, for example, by lowering the temperature, at which point H2O condenses out of the gas and forms a liquid on the walls of the chamber, leaving CO2 in the gas phase.
In an embodiment, the crown pore is symmetric with respect to the direction of molecular flow. CO2 can pass back through the pore to the flue gas side as it can pass from the flue gas to the filtered side. In an embodiment, to get a net separation of CO2 from N2 in the flue gas, there can be a partial pressure difference between the two sides so that the partial pressure and CO2 collision rate are higher on the flue gas side than the filtered side. Additionally, CO2 molecules that become trapped in the crown pore can be knocked out by the next gas molecule that hits it, with the partial pressure difference.
With a pressure difference between the two sides of the graphene sheet, a substrate can be provided to support the sheet and clamped to it. One embodiment of this support can be a hierarchical nanopore structure, where a graphene nanosheet with a high density of crown pores (e.g., 1 in every 5 nm-by-5 nm square) rests on a porous substrate. The porous substrate can be a honeycomb-like array of channels or an anodic aluminum oxide (AAO) pore-structure. A 2-dimensional (2D) cross-section of the graphene sheet attached to the porous support structure is shown in
In an embodiment, with the crown pore graphene on a substrate, for example, shown in
The symmetry of the crown pore graphene filter also implies that crushed graphene fragments randomly filled with crown pores can be assembled into an irregular mesh to make a macroscopically amorphous filter. For example, it is possible to prepare thin membranes by spin casting graphene nanosheets onto a flat surface. This method can yield highly interlocked layer structures. Additionally, laminates can be formed with a collection of micron-sized graphene crystallites, forming an interlocked layered structure that can be air-tight. When introducing crown pores in these micron-sized graphene sheets, each pore in the mesh can pass CO2 and repel N2, providing a selectively diffusive barrier that separates these two gases. In another embodiment, a large crown-pore containing graphene sheet (e.g., 4-inches-by-4-inches) can be tiled on the porous substrate.
In an aspect, using crown pores, the pore structure in graphene is stable (e.g., cannot be further oxidized) and its performance can be theoretically quantified. It can also be expected to have a higher selectivity for CO2/N2 for a graphene membrane with crown-pores than for other porous membranes.
In an embodiment, temperatures less than 600 Celsius (C), which is generally the case for flue gas environments (e.g., in the chimney), can provide for the stability of the graphene.
It can be possible to make multiple crown pores in a small graphene nanoflake and the density of crown pores in graphene can be as high as 1012/cm2. Additionally, one can increase the surface area to allow more pores for CO2 to pass through.
An aspect of the flow rate for the crown pore in graphene is further described below. It may be shown that the crown pore graphene has a much higher permeance than those other membranes currently in use. In an aspect, an amount of crown-pore-containing graphene to filter the CO2 from a coal power plant operating at 1 Giga Watt can be determined.
An example of a fabrication process can be as follows. Graphene supported by a porous substrate can be obtained, e.g., purchased. Then ion-beam-sculpting and subsequently enlargement by oxidative etching can be used to make crown pores in graphene. For example, ions can be accelerated toward the graphene to make holes in it, which subsequently react with oxygen in an oxidative etching step to make crown pores in graphene. The resulting crown pore can be fully oxidized and can be stable when being used to separate CO2 from the flue gas.
In an embodiment, defects (e.g., larger pores) in graphene, which may yield a lower selectivity, can be corrected or solved by applying multiple filters in series, to increase the purity of the final CO2. For example, if the selectivity (CO2/N2) is 95% and the input gas mixture has the ratio N2:CO2=10:1, after going through the first filter the ratio becomes 0.5263:1. Further sending this mixture through a second filter makes the ratio only 0.0277:1, suggesting that CO2 is 97.23% pure.
Carbon capture can make considerable contribution to greener environment. For instance, since the beginning of the industrial revolution, large amounts of CO2 have been put into the atmosphere. Existing membrane filters may have either a low permeance or a low selectivity for CO2. In an aspect of separating CO2 from flue gas, the functional group on the edge of a pore in graphene should not be oxidized because that would make it unstable to chemical reactions. In an embodiment, oxygen-terminated crown pores in graphene disclosed herein do not oxidize further and are therefore stable. Due to its chemical bonding, the oxygen-terminated crown pore is chemically inert, therefore it is suitable for the flue gas environment (containing O2 and with a high temperature).
In an embodiment, CO2 from N2 can be filtered using an unstretched graphene crown pore (CP) tipped with oxygen (O—CP). In an embodiment, CO2 can be filtered from N2 using an O—CP isotropically stretched by about 1.0%. In an embodiment, graphene with oxygen CPs can be placed on a porous substrate for support against driving pressure. For example, graphene with CPs can be placed directly on a porous substrate. In an embodiment, CO2 permeance can be improved by stretching graphene more to open the O—CP more. An embodiment allows pressure-swing pumping of CO2 through the O—CP membrane in which the positive flow rate is high at high pressure and the (unwanted) negative flow from backsplash is low at low pressure. In an embodiment, H2 and H2O can be filtered from other gas using a graphene O—CP. In another embodiment, crushed or spin-cast O—CP graphene can be placed into an irregular mesh to filter CO2 from N2. In an embodiment, an interlocked multi-layered structure with O—CP graphene or O—CP graphene flakes can be used to allow a large pressure difference (e.g., 100 bar) to more quickly filter CO2 from N2. In another embodiment with high CO2/N2 selectivity, graphene crown pores tipped with nitrogen can be used. Another embodiment with high molecular selectivity can include using the Coulomb force exerted by graphene crown-like pores tipped with atoms other than oxygen and nitrogen that have an electronic charge as a result of their binding with the graphene. In an embodiment, a cylindrical device with a zig-zag membrane on the surface can be provided which permits more pores for CO2 to enter from the outside (e.g., high pressure) to the inside (e.g., low pressure) of the cylinder. For example, the outside and the inside can have different pressures. For instance, the high pressure part of this zig zag pattern can be either inside or outside the graphene zig zag. For instance, the center of the zig zag can be lower pressure than the outside region, or the other way too, for example, the center of the zig zag can be higher pressure than the outside. Generally, for example, there can be some pressure difference between the inside and the outside regions. An embodiment can include an application of a two-stage filter where a low-selectivity conventional membrane filter is used before the high-selectivity graphene crown pore filter. An embodiment can include an application of several graphene crown pore filters in series to improve the total CO2 purity.
Mass Flux Through the Crown Pores
By way of example, this discussion calculates the flow rate of CO2 per unit area through crown pore graphene and estimates the total area needed to capture the CO2 from a GigaWatt power plant burning coal. It also calculates the permeance, which is the flow rate per unit pressure difference, measured in units of 10−10 moles m−2s−1 Pa−1.
Consider the kinetic theory of gases, where the flux of molecules through a surface is J=nνm/4 where νm is the mean thermal speed, (8 kBT/πm)0.5 for Boltzmann constant kB=1.38×10−16 erg K−1, mass m of the molecule, temperature T, and density n. With molecules on both sides of the surface going in each direction, J=Δnsνm/4 where Δns=n2−no is the difference in select gas density on the two sides, subscript 2 indicating the flue gas side of the membrane while no is the density of the same molecule outside. The total density on the flue gas side is denoted by n, so for a select molecule that is a fraction f of the total number of molecules on the flue gas side, n2=fn and J=(fn−no)νm/4.
First find the density of all molecules at Standard Temperature and Pressure (STP). For example, use the perfect gas law, P=nkBT where P=1.01×106 dyn/cm2 at STP and T=273.15K. This gives a total density n=2.68×1019 cm−3.
The mean thermal speed of CO2 is νm=3.61×104 cm/s at STP for mean molecular weight equal to (12+2×16)×1.67×10−24 grams=7.35×10−23 grams. Let Δns=nΔPs/P for relative partial pressure difference of the select gas, ΔPs/P. The two sides of the filter are assumed to be at the same temperature, so ΔPs=(n2−n0)kBT. For high pressures on the flue gas side, n2>>no, in which case ΔPs/P≈fΔP/P where ΔP/P>>1 is the compression factor.
These equations give the flux through a surface equal to
J=0.25nνmfΔP/P=2.42×1023f(ΔP/P) (1)
at STP in units of molecules per second per square cm.
Now convert this number flux to a mass flux F by multiplying J by the mean mass per CO2 molecule, which from above is 7.35×10−23 grams. The result is F=17.8f (ΔP/P) grams cm−2s−1.
This is for an open surface. Multiply this by the fraction of the area of the graphene that is covered by crown pores, assuming each pore is a hole like this. The density of crown pores can be as high as 1012 cm−2, and the size of a pore is 0.05 nm2=5×10−16 cm2. Considering an uncertainty factor E that is either larger than 1 if there is an attractive force to the hole or smaller than 1 if the CO2 alignment and orientation has to be more precise than in the kinetic theory, the fraction of the area covered by the holes is η=5×10−4∈.
Then the mass flux through the crown pores is approximately
F=17.8ηf(ΔP/P)=8.9×10−3∈f(ΔP/P)gcm−2s−1. (2)
The permeance is the flux in units of moles per unit area and time, per unit pressure difference. The same starting point is J=Δnνm/4 for density difference Δn and thermal speed νm. For one Pascal of pressure difference, ΔP1=10 dy cm−2, the density difference is Δn=ΔP1/kBT=2.65×1014ΔP1 cm−3 for T=273.15 K. Multiplying this by νm/4 gives J=2.39×1018 molecules cm−2 s−1 Pa−1, and dividing the result by Avogadro's number gives J=4.0×10−6 moles cm−2 s−1 Pa−1. Considering now the fraction of the area that has a crown pore, η=5×10−4∈, the permeance for CO2 in crown pore graphene is the product of these, Jcrown pore=2×10−9∈ moles cm−2s−1 Pa−1. In units of m−2, this is Jcrown pore=2×10−5∈ moles m−2s−1 Pa−1. In common units of 10−10 moles m−2s−1 Pa−1, this is a permeance of 2.0×105∈.
This permeance is much larger than other known membranes such as the hollow fiber cellulose triacetate membranes, an asymmetric hollow fibre membrane and other known systems. The crown pore graphene disclosed herein has a much higher permeance than these other membranes currently in use. This implies a much smaller membrane area is needed, by the inverse of the permeance.
Area needed to Capture CO2 from a GW Coal Power Plant
Now calculate graphene area at the above crown pore density to filter the CO2 from a coal power plant operating at 1 Giga Watt, which serves as a reference point.
According to the EIA (https colon slash slash (://) www dot (.) eia dot (.) gov slash (/) tools slash (/) fags slash (/) faq dot (.) php?id7
Now estimate the area A of crown pore graphene needed to filter this CO2 rate. Equate the product of the flux per unit area times the area, FA, to the emission rate of CO2: FA=2.83×105 g s−1, where F=8.9×10−3∈f(ΔP/P) g cm−2 s−1. This gives A=3.18×103/(∈fΔP/P) m2. With f=0.2 for the CO2 fraction of molecules in flue gas and ΔP/P=50 for the average compression factor above atmospheric pressure, A=318/∈ m2. Scaled to the power output S of the coal power plant, A=318S/∈ m2 for S in GW. Recall that ∈ is a correction factor to convert the perfect gas equations for flux through a hole to the actual flux for CO2 through a crown pore graphene membrane.
Natural gas emits less CO2 per GW. According to the EIA again, natural gas produces 1.36×1012 kWh in the USA and produces 5.6×1014 grams of CO2. This is 1.14×105 g CO2 s−1 for a GW, compared to 2.83×105 g CO2 s−1 for coal. The ratio is 0.41. Applying this ratio to the required graphene area, we get 129/∈ m2 for a GW powered by natural gas.
The result is ˜320 m2 for a GW of coal power and ˜130 m2 for a GW of gas power, divided by the correction factor ∈. Typical membrane areas for a GW power plant from known examples can be 103 times larger, on the order of several times 105 m2, because the permeance of the membranes considered there are around 103 times lower.
According to Carbon Brief (https colon slash slash (://) www dot (.) carbonbrief dot (.) org slash (/) mapped-worlds-coal-power-plants), there is 2.045 TW of coal-fired power in the world. That corresponds to a need for ˜6.5×105 m2 of crown pore graphene, or 0.65 square kilometer. According to Forbes (https colon slash slash (://) www dot (.) forbes dot (.) com slash (/) sites slash (/) judeclemente slash (/) 2019 slash (/) 12 slash (/) 15 slash (/) global-natural-gas-electricity-is-gaining-on-coal slash (/) ?sh=61ecdb407bfd), there is 1.7 TW of gas-fired power in the world. That corresponds to an additional need for ˜2.1×105 m2 of crown pore graphene, or 0.21 square kilometer. The sum of these needs is 0.86 square km. According to ACS Material (https colon slash slash (://) www dot (.) acsmaterial dot (.) com slash (/) graphene-facts), one square meter of graphene weighs 0.77 milligrams, so 0.86 square km weighs 0.66 kg.
In an aspect, all of the CO2 emission by power plants in the world may be captured by about one kilogram of crown pore graphene.
Two Stage Filtering
Crown pore graphene can be a filter for CO2 that can have a very high selectivity over N2. The amount of crown pore graphene can be reduced if another membrane with less selectivity filters the flue gas as a first step, passing the result with a high CO2 fraction to crown pore graphene for a second filtering to make the CO2 fraction even higher.
The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting of the invention. As used herein, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. As used herein, the term “or” is an inclusive operator and can mean “and/or”, unless the context explicitly or clearly indicates otherwise. It will be further understood that the terms “comprise”, “comprises”, “comprising”, “include”, “includes”, “including”, and/or “having,” when used herein, can specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof. As used herein, the phrase “in an embodiment” does not necessarily refer to the same embodiment, although it may. As used herein, the phrase “in one embodiment” does not necessarily refer to the same embodiment, although it may. As used herein, the phrase “in another embodiment” does not necessarily refer to a different embodiment, although it may. Further, embodiments and/or components of embodiments can be freely combined with each other unless they are mutually exclusive.
The corresponding structures, materials, acts, and equivalents of all means or step plus function elements, if any, in the claims below are intended to include any structure, material, or act for performing the function in combination with other claimed elements as specifically claimed. The description of the present invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description, but is not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the invention in the form disclosed. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. The embodiment was chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and the practical application, and to enable others of ordinary skill in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/276,751, filed on Nov. 8, 2021, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63276751 | Nov 2021 | US |