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Accelerated carbonation of steel slags using CO2diluted sources: CO2uptakes and energy requirements

Authors :
Daniela Zingaretti
A. Stramazzo
Raffaella Pomi
Alessandra Polettini
Giulia Costa
Renato Baciocchi
Source :
Frontiers in Energy Research, Vol 3 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2016.

Abstract

This work presents the results of carbonation experiments performed on Basic Oxygen Furnace (BOF) steel slag samples employing gas mixtures containing 40 and 10% CO2 vol. simulating the gaseous effluents of gasification and combustion processes respectively, as well as 100% CO2 for comparison purposes. Two routes were tested, the slurry-phase (L/S = 5 l/kg, T = 100°C and Ptot = 10 bar) and the thin-film (L/S = 0.3–0.4 l kg, T = 50°C and Ptot = 7–10 bar) routes. For each one, the CO2 uptake achieved as a function of the reaction time was analyzed and on this basis, the energy requirements associated with each carbonation route and gas mixture composition were estimated considering to store the CO2 emissions of a medium size natural gas fired power plant (20 MW). For the slurry-phase route, maximum CO2 uptakes ranged from around 8% at 10% CO2, to 21.1% (BOF-a) and 29.2% (BOF-b) at 40% CO2 and 32.5% (BOF-a) and 40.3% (BOF-b) at 100% CO2. For the thin-film route, maximum uptakes of 13% (BOF-c) and 19.5% (BOF-d) at 40% CO2, and 17.8% (BOF-c) and 20.2% (BOF-d) at 100% were attained. The energy requirements of the two analyzed process routes appeared to depend chiefly on the CO2 uptake of the slag. For both process route, the minimum overall energy requirements were found for the tests with 40% CO2 flows (i.e., 1400−1600 MJ/tCO2 for the slurry-phase and 2220 – 2550 MJ/tCO2 for the thin-film route).

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Energy Research, Vol 3 (2016)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3f94c6abc3a89d71cdbd38b5ca7a0b0b