Thursday, March 22, 2012

Industrial Demonstration of Post-Combustion Co2 Capture

Launch of the European Octavius Research Project

RUEIL-MALMAISON, France - Thursday, March 22nd 2012 [ME NewsWire]

(BUSINESS WIRE)-- On 13 and 14 March this year, the Octavius project dedicated to post-combustion CO2 capture has been launched at IFPEN (France). The main challenge of the project is to significantly increase the energy efficiency of the capture technologies in order to reduce its costs.

The objectives are as follows:

    to prepare for the first CO2 capture and storage (CCS) demonstrators on a thermal power plant scale, implementing 1rst generation CO2 capture processes using amine-type solvents. Three CO2 capture pilot units – the Cato pilot unit in Maasvlakte (Netherlands), the Enel pilot unit in Brindisi (Italy) and the EnBW pilot unit in Heilbronn (Germany) – will be used to test the operability and flexibility of 1rst generation processes.
    to demonstrate the DMXTM 2nd generation post-combustion capture process resulting from IFPEN research on an industrial scale. This demonstration will be conducted on the Enel pilot unit, capable of capturing up to 2.25 tCO2/h on coal combustion flue gases.

Coordinated by IFPEN, the project brings together 16 other partners: TNO, Sintef, NTNU, Ineris, DTU, TUHH, E.ON, EnBW, Doosan Power Systems, Enel, Laborelec (GDFSuez), EDF, Prosernat,TIPS, EcoMetrix and Eskom.

Scheduled to last 5 years, Octavius has a budget of €13.5 million, €8 million of which will be provided by the European Commission.

1rst generation capture processes use alkanolamines. Commercially available, alkanolamine based processes have been proposed for the ROAD and Porto Tolle CCS demonstration projects. The Octavius project will provide the most recent information required for full-scale implementation of these processes, with respect to atmospheric emissions, operability, flexibility and integration.

The DMXTM process developed by IFPEN uses a demixing solvent capable of cutting the energy consumption for solvent regeneration by almost 40%, reducing it until 2.3 GJ per metric ton of CO2 captured, in comparison with 3.7 GJ/tCO2 for a standard process using a solution containing 30% by weight of MonoEthanolAmine. The first technical and economic assessments have demonstrated that the DMXTM method applied to CO2 capture on a coal-fired thermal power plant reduces the energy penalty by 2 points, thereby cutting the costs associated with CO2 capture by 20%.

Contacts

Project coordinator:

IFPEN

Paul Broutin, +33 (0)4 37 70 26 97

paul.broutin@ifpen.fr

 

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