Open Access Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington
Browse

Separation and concentration of CO2 from air using a humidity-driven molten-carbonate membrane

journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-10, 08:43 authored by IS Metcalfe, GA Mutch, EI Papaioannou, S Tsochataridou, D Neagu, DJL Brett, F Iacoviello, TS Miller, PR Shearing, Patricia HuntPatricia Hunt
Separation processes are substantially more difficult when the species to be separated is highly dilute. To perform any dilute separation, thermodynamic and kinetic limitations must be overcome. Here we report a molten-carbonate membrane that can ‘pump’ CO2 from a 400 ppm input stream (representative of air) to an output stream with a higher concentration of CO2, by exploiting ambient energy in the form of a humidity difference. The substantial H2O concentration difference across the membrane drives CO2 permeation ‘uphill’ against its own concentration difference, analogous to active transport in biological membranes. The introduction of this H2O concentration difference also results in a kinetic enhancement that boosts the CO2 flux by an order of magnitude even as the CO2 input stream concentration is decreased by three orders of magnitude from 50% to 400 ppm. Computational modelling shows that this enhancement is due to the H2O-mediated formation of carriers within the molten salt that facilitate rapid CO2 transport.

History

Preferred citation

Metcalfe, I. S., Mutch, G. A., Papaioannou, E. I., Tsochataridou, S., Neagu, D., Brett, D. J. L., Iacoviello, F., Miller, T. S., Shearing, P. R. & Hunt, P. A. (2024). Separation and concentration of CO2 from air using a humidity-driven molten-carbonate membrane. Nature Energy, 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41560-024-01588-6

Journal title

Nature Energy

Publication date

2024-01-01

Pagination

1-10

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2024-07-19

ISSN

2058-7546

eISSN

2058-7546

Language

en

Usage metrics

    Journal articles

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC