(704f) Ionothermal Carbonization of Agricultural Waste into Porous Biochar for CO2 Capture | AIChE

(704f) Ionothermal Carbonization of Agricultural Waste into Porous Biochar for CO2 Capture

Authors 

Onsree, T. - Presenter, University of South Carolina
Phromphithak, S., Chiang Mai University
Tippayawong, N., Chiang Mai University
Roberts, K., University of South Carolina, 301 Main St Rm 2C02
Lauterbach, J., University of South Carolina
Carbon capture, utilization, and storage are emerging technologies to effectively mitigate CO2 emissions and advance Net Zero technologies. Biochar is regarded as one of the promising CO2 capture materials. Agricultural waste/residue, a carbon-rich material, can be converted into biochar via several thermochemical pathways. However, different CO2 capture applications require different biochar properties and hence different synthesis methods1. Ionic liquid (IL) solvents can be integrated into traditional thermochemical conversions of biomass to produce advanced porous carbonaceous materials2. Biomass is mixed into an IL solvent, and the mixture is treated under medium pressures and temperatures, which is similar to wet/hydrothermal carbonization of biomass. The main product is known as ionochar. This process, which is called ionothermal carbonization (ITC), has not been well explored for agricultural residues.

ITC of agricultural waste was investigated at a fixed reaction temperature of 200 °C with IL solvents (e.g., ChCl, ChOH, and ChFeCl4). The ionochar produced was further impregnated with varying metals, such as Ca, Mg, and Al, and subsequently treated under nitrogen gas from 500 to 900 °C to obtain activated ionochar for CO2 capture. IL solvents, impregnated metals, and treated temperatures were observed to significantly affect the properties of activated ionochar in terms of, for example, specific surface area and CO2 uptake ability. The specified activated ionochar with overall best properties was further tested for CO2 capture ability with synthetic powerplant flue gas. Our findings indicated that activated ionochar from agricultural waste can have valorization of CO2 capture with low capital cost and good adsorption capacity.

Reference

1A. N. Shafawi, A. R. Mohamed, P. Lahijani, M. Mohammadi (2021) Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 9(6): 106869.

2L. Cibien, M. Parot, P.N. Fotsing, P. Gaveau, E. D. Woumfo, J. Vieillard, A. Napoli, N. Brun (2020) Green Chemistry 22: 5423-5436.