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ORNL has developed a new technique for efficiently capturing carbon dioxide from waste gas streams from fossil fuel combustion. The separation technique has stirred industrial interest.

Capturing Carbon the ORNL Way

Carbon composities may be the key to capturing carbon dioxide from fossil fuel combustion. ORNL researchers have developed a promising new technology called carbon fiber composite molecular sieves (CFCMS) that can be designed to capture carbon dioxide emitted from coal-fired power plants and gas turbines. The recovered carbon gas could be collected in a vessel for transport to a carbon sequestration site. It could then be injected into an underground coal bed, depleted oil reservoir, or the ocean.

Tim Burchell, Charlie Weaver, and Bill Chilcoat, all of ORNL's Metals and Ceramics Division, developed CFCMS technology in collaboration with researchers at the University of Kentucky. The work was grounded in ORNL's previous experience of developing carbon-bonded, carbon-fiber insulation for thermoelectric cells in space probes.

"Our technology has several advantages over conventional granular activated-carbon beds for removing carbon dioxide from gas streams," says ORNL Fossil Energy Program Manager Rod Judkins. "It not only adsorbs more carbon but it also takes it up 5 to 10 times faster. And 2 to 10 times less energy is required to recover the adsorbed carbon dioxide and regenerate the filter so it can be used again."

Because the CFCMS filter is electrically conductive, carbon can be removed from the saturated sieve by running an electrical current through it at low voltage. "There are several possible explanations of how electrical desorption works," Judkins says. "Maybe it's a surface heating effect." In a conventional activated-carbon bed, the carbon is recovered by a more energy-intensive process, such as heating or depressurizing the bed.

ORNL researchers can make monolithic CFCMS structures in various shapes, such as a rectangular slab or a cylinder. "The structure is very porous and very low in density," Judkins says. "It's 80% void space."

The secret to adsorbing a specific gas is to create a structure with numerous pores of the right size—width and volume—to trap the gas molecules, which are naturally attracted to the carbon. Burchell, Judkins, and their colleagues used chopped-up carbon fibers made from petroleum pitch, bonded them together with phenolic resin, and then "activated" the structure to create micropores as adsorption sites for gas molecules.

"We activate the structure by flowing in steam, oxygen, or carbon dioxide at 850°C to gasify its carbon and carry much of it off," Judkins says. "We control this process to get a large enough surface area and pore volume and width to optimize the capture of carbon dioxide."

The ORNL technology has attracted the interest of many large industrial companies looking for better ways to remove or recover carbon dioxide and other gases from process streams. An international consortium of oil companies and a fuel cell manufacturer want to use the technology to remove carbon dioxide from natural gas. Another fuel cell manufacturer is interested in removing sulfur compounds from natural gas to make it a better hydrogen source. Sulfur compounds are added as odorants so people can smell leaking natural gas and take precautions. The international consortium plans to use the ORNL technology to remove carbon dioxide from the exhaust stream of a gas turbine to mitigate its emissions.

"We are negotiating with a major carbon company to license the CFCMS technology," Judkins says.

Similar technology was used in Burchell, Judkins, and Kirk Wilson's development of a self-cleaning carbon air filter that received an R&D 100 Award in 1999. When this filter becomes dirty, it doesn't have to be replaced like filters containing loose, granular, activated carbon. Instead, it uses an automatic reverse-air-cleaning cycle in which an electric current is passed through the filter, releasing the adsorbed contaminants into a purge air stream that exhausts harmful pollutants outdoors.

Self-cleaning carbon air filter (jpg, 41K)
Tim Burchell (left), Kirk Wilson, and Rod Judkins developed a self-cleaning carbon air filter that uses carbon fiber composite molecular sieves.

The self-cleaning carbon air filter could be used to reduce cooking odors in kitchens, filter formaldehyde and other airborne toxic gases from home and office air, and preserve air quality aboard airplanes and submarines. The British Ministry of Defense and the U.S. Army are testing the ORNL technology for removing chemical agents from air. It is likely that ORNL's gas capture technology will continue to capture industrial and military interest.

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ORNL's Metals & Ceramics Division
ORNL's Fossil Energy Program
R&D 100 Awards

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