Optimization of the structural characteristics of CaO and its effective stabilization yield high-capacity CO2 sorbents

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Abstract

Calcium looping, a CO2 capture technique, may offer a mid-term if not near-term solution to mitigate climate change, triggered by the yet increasing anthropogenic CO2 emissions. A key requirement for the economic operation of calcium looping is the availability of highly effective CaO-based CO2 sorbents. Here we report a facile synthesis route that yields hollow, MgO-stabilized, CaO microspheres featuring highly porous multishelled morphologies. As a thermal stabilizer, MgO minimized the sintering-induced decay of the sorbents' CO2 capacity and ensured a stable CO2 uptake over multiple operation cycles. Detailed electron microscopy-based analyses confirm a compositional homogeneity which is identified, together with the characteristics of its porous structure, as an essential feature to yield a high-performance sorbent. After 30 cycles of repeated CO2 capture and sorbent regeneration, the best performing material requires as little as 11 wt.% MgO for structural stabilization and exceeds the CO2 uptake of the limestone-derived reference material by ~500%.

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Naeem, M. A., Armutlulu, A., Imtiaz, Q., Donat, F., Schäublin, R., Kierzkowska, A., & Müller, C. R. (2018). Optimization of the structural characteristics of CaO and its effective stabilization yield high-capacity CO2 sorbents. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-04794-5

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