Advancing energy-efficient CO2 desorption from amine solvent using SO42-/ZrO2 catalytic membrane contactor under falling film evaporation

Yunzhao Guo, Ming Ni, Peng Xu, Kaiyun Fu, Xianfu Chen, Minghui Qiu, Yiqun Fan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

CO2 capture using amines holds promise for emission reduction, however, it faces critical energy penalties during solvent regeneration >120 °C. Herein, we propose a novel strategy for boosting 30 wt% monoethanolamine (MEA) regeneration below 100 °C, by immobilizing a sulfated zirconia (SO42-/ZrO2) catalyst on a tubular ceramic membrane substrate, as opposed to conventional particulate supports. This design, which seamlessly combines catalytic dissociation (for accelerated MEA-CO2 breakdown) and intensified mass transfer (leveraging falling film evaporation for CO2 release), achieves synergistic efficiency gains in low-temperature regeneration. Combined characterization and density functional theory (DFT) calculations confirmed that SO42-/ZrO2 species strongly anchored on the Al2O3 substrate due to electron transfer between Zr and O, creating Brønsted and Lewis acid sites. These structural features enabled the catalytic membrane to achieve a desorption flux of 16.85 mol/(m2·h) (41.8 % higher than non-catalytic membranes) at energy consumption of 31.8 kJ/mol CO2 (38.2 % reduction vs. conventional thermal desorption). It retained 97 % of desorption flux without detectable acid-catalyst leaching over 10 desorption cycles. DFT calculations reveal that ZrO2-SO42--H acid sites act as “proton pumps”, lowering the energy barrier of MEA-CO2 dissociation. The catalytic mechanism was further clarified by correlating various acid site configurations with reaction energy barriers. This approach offers a scalable platform for energy-efficient amine regeneration, advancing CO2 capture systems.

Original languageEnglish
Article number124343
JournalJournal of Membrane Science
Volume733
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2025

Keywords

  • Amine
  • Catalytic membrane
  • CO desorption
  • Membrane contactor
  • SO/ZrO

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