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Title Unlocking synergistic benefits of the calcium looping-calcium hydroxide integration for energy storage: A perspective on sorbent performance
Authors ARCENEGUI TROYA, JUAN JESÚS, Carro A. , ORTIZ DOMÍNGUEZ, CARLOS, Chacartegui R. , Perejón A. , Pérez-Maqueda L.A. , Sánchez-Jiménez P.E.
External publication No
Means Chem. Eng. J.
Scope Article
Nature Científica
JCR Quartile 1
SJR Quartile 1
Web https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85213261172&doi=10.1016%2fj.cej.2024.158775&partnerID=40&md5=58c9acb7a20614d1cd7261042858e04c
Publication date 01/01/2025
Scopus Id 2-s2.0-85213261172
DOI 10.1016/j.cej.2024.158775
Abstract Calcium Looping has recently attracted attention as a high temperature thermochemical energy storage system. However, significant sintering due to the high temperatures hampers the recyclability of CaO. Hydration and hydroxylation has been explored as a method to regenerate the spent CaO. This study investigates a novel synergistic integration of carbonation (CaCO3/CaO) and hydroxylation (CaO/Ca(OH)2) reactions. Calcination was conducted in N2 and N2/H2O mixtures with 29 % steam content. Carbonation was conducted in CO2/H2O mixture with similar steam concentrations. Results show that steam plays a dual role: during calcination, it promotes the formation of large pores on the CaO surface, and during carbonation, it enhances mineralization, resulting in larger CaCO3 grains. Also, steam promotes CO2 diffusion through the CaCO3 layer and, at the same time, significantly mitigates the deactivation of CaO along the cycles. Specifically, sequential calcination/carbonation cycles without steam yield a residual conversion value of 0.14. Steam injection improved residual conversion to 0.27. Alternatively, the interleaving of hydroxylation/dehydroxylation cycles in the sequence further increased this value to 0.64 without steam and up to 0.76 with steam injection. Hydroxylation/dehydroxylation cycles alone demonstrated high stability, with a residual conversion of 0.98 when interleaved with calcination/carbonation cycles under 29 % steam conditions. Additionally, frequent hydroxylation/dehydroxylation cycles improve overall conversion stability, highlighting their synergistic benefits within the integrated process. This work underscores the potential of integrating Calcium Looping with Calcium Hydroxide for improved multicycle performance and opens pathways for scaling experiments to pilot systems, alongside assessing the efficiency and economic viability of this integrated approach. © 2024 The Author(s)
Keywords Carbon capture and storage; Carbon sequestration; Carbonation; Integration; Interfacial energy; Supersaturation; Temperature; Calcination/carbonation; Calcium hydroxylation; Calcium looping; Dehydroxylations; Energy; Highest temperature; Performance; Steam injection; Storage systems; Thermochemical energy storage; Sintering
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