Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1512811 | Energy Procedia | 2013 | 8 Pages |
The IGCC technology (Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle) with pre-combustion CO2 capture is a promising approach for near-zero CO2 emission power plants to be realized in the near future. A key challenge within this technology is the separation of the CO2/H2 gas mixture resulting from the water gas shift reaction that follows the gasification of coal. For the CO2 stream a purity of about 95% is required; additionally a CO2 capture rate of 90% is desired, which implies that both streams, H2 and CO2, are required at rather high purity (∼95%). In contrast to post- combustion capture from power plants, where a large gas stream at low pressure and low CO2 content has to be treated, in pre-combustion capture a gas mixture at up to 40 bar has to be separated; therefore an adsorption based process, such as pressure swing adsorption (PSA), constitutes a promising method for CO2 removal from H2.In this work, new materials, namely USO-2-Ni MOF, UiO-67/MCM-41 Hybrid and MCM-41, are characterized in