(431a) A Quantitative, Molecular Simulations Based, Kinetic Model of Acid Gas Absorption in Aqueous Amines | AIChE

(431a) A Quantitative, Molecular Simulations Based, Kinetic Model of Acid Gas Absorption in Aqueous Amines

Authors 

de Meyer, F. - Presenter, Totalenergies S.E.
Poulain, B., Total S.E.
Rozanska, X., Materials Design sarl
The removal of acid gases like CO2 and H2S is an essential process in a natural gas plant. The state-of-the-art technology for acid gas treatment is the chemical absorption with aqueous alkanolamines. The same technology is also increasingly used to capture CO2 from flue gases in the fight against climate change. Despite this technology existing for almost a century, many basic questions remain unanswered, preventing major progress in identifying more efficient solvents for acid gas removal and CO2 capture.

It would, for example, be efficacious to have a quantitative and predictive model of the rate-controlling processes of acid gas absorption by aqueous tertiary amines. Despite numerous attempts to date, there is no quantitative relationship between the amine structure and the rate of absorption of acid gases (CO2 and H2S).

The present computational study achieves this goal by focusing on the reaction of CO2 and H2S with OH- forming HCO3- and HS-. The performance of the resulting model is demonstrated for a consistent experimental dataset of the absorption rates of CO2 and H2S for a dozen of amines. The key to the new model’s success is that the reaction free energy barriers are evaluated from the solvation free energies of the reactants and the products, obtained from molecular dynamics simulations. Those simulations include subtle solvation effects of reactants and products, which turn out to be essential to understand the kinetic properties of the amines.

[1] Rozanska, X., Wimmer, E. & de Meyer, F. Quantitative Kinetic Model of CO2 Absorption in Aqueous Tertiary Amine Solvents. J. Chem. Inf. Model. 61, 1814–1824 (2021)