Techno-economic modeling of carbon dioxide hydrate formation for carbon sequestration

被引:0
|
作者
Bhati, Awan [1 ]
Hamalian, Mark [1 ]
Bahadur, Vaibhav [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Austin, Austin, TX USA
关键词
CO (2) hydrates; Carbon sequestration; Bubble column reactor; Techno-economic modeling; Hydrate foam; CO2; CAPTURE; OCEAN;
D O I
10.1016/j.apenergy.2024.124491
中图分类号
TE [石油、天然气工业]; TK [能源与动力工程];
学科分类号
0807 ; 0820 ;
摘要
Significant carbon sequestration capacity (up to 10 Gigatons/yr) will be needed by 2050 to limit the Earth's temperature rise to <1.5 degrees C. Current worldwide sequestration capacity is only similar to 40MT/yr, which highlights the need for the development of new and scalable sequestration approaches. One promising approach for long-term sequestration of carbon dioxide (CO2) is the deposition of CO2 hydrates (ice-like solids of water and CO2) on the seabed with artificial sealing (or under marine sediments). Technologically, this involves formation of CO2 hydrate foam, transport of the foam to the sequestration site, compaction into hydrate plugs, sealing and then disposal. Critical to the techno-economic success of this concept is the ability to rapidly form hydrates. The present group has achieved very high rates of formation of hydrate foam by bubbling CO2 gas at high flow rates in a bubble column reactor (BCR). This study utilizes recent experimental results on ultra-fast hydrate formation to conduct a detailed techno-economic analysis of the hydrate foam-making process. All analysis is conducted for a 1 Megaton/yr sequestration project with project life of 30 years. Our analysis shows that the energy requirements (assumed as electrical in this study) for hydrate formation equal 260 kWhr/ton and the total cost of hydrate foam production is $36/ton. The biggest cost component is energy, which accounts for 51 % of total cost. A 1 Megaton/yr project will require an initial capital investment of $150 M. Such a project will consume 0.66 million cubic meters of seawater/yr. Contributions of various key processes to the total cost are quantified. Process-wise, the biggest contributors to total cost are refrigeration and gas compression, which account for 41 % and 27 % of the total cost, respectively. Cost of the BCR is only 0.1 % of the total investment cost. Also, gas recirculation in the BCR contributes minimally (0.14 %) to the overall energy requirement. Finally, this study identifies pathways to reduce $/ton costs to increase the viability of this carbon sequestration approach. It is noted that hydrate transportation, compaction and sealing are not included in this analysis which focuses on the techno-economics of rapid hydrate formation only.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] TECHNO-ECONOMIC MODELING OF CO2 HYDRATE SLURRY FORMATION FOR CARBON SEQUESTRATION
    Bahadur, Vaibhav
    Bhati, Awan
    PROCEEDINGS OF ASME 2024 18TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENERGY SUSTAINABILITY, ES2024, 2024,
  • [2] Techno-economic insights and deployment prospects of permanent carbon dioxide sequestration in solid carbonates
    Muhlbauer, Andreas
    Keiner, Dominik
    Breyer, Christian
    ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2024, 17 (22) : 8756 - 8775
  • [3] Ultrafast Formation of Carbon Dioxide Hydrate Foam for Carbon Sequestration
    Bhati, Awan
    Hamalian, Mark
    Acharya, Palash V.
    Bahadur, Vaibhav
    ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING, 2024, 12 (29): : 11013 - 11023
  • [4] Techno-economic and carbon dioxide emission assessment of carbon black production
    Rosner, Fabian
    Bhagde, Trisha
    Slaughter, Daniel S.
    Zorba, Vassilia
    Stokes-Draut, Jennifer
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2024, 436
  • [5] Techno-economic Analysis of Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Power Blocks
    Meybodi, Mehdi Aghaei
    Beath, Andrew
    Gwynn-Jones, Stephen
    Veeraragavan, Anand
    Gurgenci, Hal
    Hooman, Kamel
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CONCENTRATING SOLAR POWER AND CHEMICAL ENERGY SYSTEMS (SOLARPACES 2016), 2017, 1850
  • [6] Carbon dioxide hydrate particles for ocean carbon sequestration
    Chow, A. C.
    Adams, E. E.
    Israelsson, P. H.
    Tsouris, C.
    GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL TECHNOLOGIES 9, 2009, 1 (01): : 4937 - 4944
  • [7] A techno-economic analysis of diesel exhaust injection into mine tailings for carbon sequestration
    Baidya, Durjoy
    Dipple, Gregory
    Ghoreishi-Madiseh, Seyed Ali
    HELIYON, 2024, 10 (06)
  • [8] A comparative techno-economic analysis for implementation of carbon dioxide to chemicals processes
    Zhun Li
    Jinyang Zhao
    Ping Li
    Yadong Yu
    Chenxi Cao
    Chinese Journal of Chemical Engineering, 2024, 75 (11) : 86 - 101
  • [9] Techno-economic assessment of low-temperature carbon dioxide electrolysis
    Haeun Shin
    Kentaro U. Hansen
    Feng Jiao
    Nature Sustainability, 2021, 4 : 911 - 919
  • [10] Techno-Economic Assessment of the Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Enhanced Geothermal Systems
    Tagliaferri, Mauro
    Gladysz, Pawel
    Ungar, Pietro
    Strojny, Magdalena
    Talluri, Lorenzo
    Fiaschi, Daniele
    Manfrida, Giampaolo
    Andresen, Trond
    Sowizdzal, Anna
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 14 (24)